Post on 18-Jan-2023
REPRESENTING AND PERFORMING LAZ IDENTITY
“THIS IS NOT A REBEL SONG!”
NİLÜFER TAŞKIN
BOĞAZİÇİ UNIVERSITY
2011
REPRESENTING AND PERFORMING LAZ IDENTITY
“THIS IS NOT A REBEL SONG!”
Thesis submitted to the
Institute for Graduate Studies in Social Sciences
in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts
in
Sociology
by
Nilüfer Taşkın
BOĞAZİÇİ UNIVERSITY
2011
i
Thesis Abstract
Nilüfer Taşkın, “Representing and Performing Laz identity
‘This is not a rebel song!’”
This study examines the process by which second generation Laz migrants have re-
appropriated Laz identity through music and dance performances held in the major
metropolitan cities of twenty first century Turkey.
The relevant cultural performances are interpreted as a response to repercussions of
Turkey’s ‘modernization project’ and its related cultural policies. Conceptualizing the
performances, particularly through language, music and dance, this thesis tries to
understand how the Laz experience respond to this ‘modernization’.
Another significant concern of this study is to analyze how Lazness is defined and
constructed within mainstream discourses. As a part of this, the crucial role of the Laz
middle class position is discussed. In addition, the recent wave of ‘multiculturalist
discourse’ provides a convenient conceptual framework for positioning the Laz as the
“good citizens” of contemporary Turkey. Finally, the so-called ‘oppositional stance’ of
both the performances and the constructed Laz identity are criticized with consideration
given to their marketability and political moderation.
ii
Tez Özeti
Nilüfer Taşkın, “Laz Kimliğinin Temsili ve Performansı
‘Bu bir isyan şarkısı değil!’”
Bu çalışma, ikinci kuşak Laz göçmenlerin özellikle 2000’lerde, büyük kentlerde ortaya
çıkan müzik ve dans performansları üzerinden Laz kimliği ile nasıl ilişkilendiğini
sorgulamaktadır.
Bu kültürel performanslar, Türkiye’deki ‘modernleşme projesi’ doğrultusunda ortaya
çıkan kültür politikalarına bir tepki olarak yorumlanmaktadır. Bu tez, dil, müzik ve dans
temaları üzerinden bu kültür performanslarını kavramsallaştırmak yoluyla Lazların
modernleşme deneyimlerini anlama çabasıdır.
Bu çalışmanın diğer bir önemli kaygısı da, Lazlığın nasıl egemen söylemler içinden
tanımlandığı ve kurulduğunu analiz etmektir. Bu bağlamda, bir taraftan Lazlar’ın orta
sınıf pozisyonlarının hayati rol oynadığı tartışılmıştır. Öte yandan, yakın dönemde
yükselen ‘çokkültürlülük söylemi’nin kendisi Lazlar’ı Türkiye’nin ‘makbul vatandaşlar’
pozisyonuna yerleştirmek için ideal kavramsal çerçeveyi sunmaktadır.
Sonuç olarak bu tezde, bu performansların ve dolayısıyla kurulan Laz kimliğinin, pazar
değeri ve politik ılımlılıkları göz önünde bulundurulduğunda iddia edildiğinin aksine
‘muhalif’ olma durumları eleştirilmektedir.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Perhaps no writing can be credited to a single author, despite the appearance of a singular name below the title. This is particularly true of a masters thesis—a voyage into the world of scholarship. Thus, there are many people, from academic advisors to family and friends, to whom I am grateful for their assistance in finalizing my masters thesis.
First of all, I would like to thank my supervisor Assoc. Prof. Meltem Ahıska for her sincere support and encouragement particularly through struggles in the writing process. I am deeply grateful for her meticulous guidance and critique. Completing the writing process would not have been possible without her constant belief in me. I would also like to thank Prof. Dr. Nükhet Sirman for her valuable contributions in developing the analytical framework of my study. Moreover, the questions that emerged during our readings together shaped a large portion of my research. To Prof. Dr. Arzu Öztürkmen, who kindly agreed to participate in my jury and shared insight from her wealth of field experiences at the very beginning of my research, I also express my utmost gratitude.
In addition, I am especially grateful to Assoc. Prof. Yüksel Taşkın. Besides his critique and support of this particular project, he has been influential in my choice to study sociology from the start. (I would, otherwise, probably have been a terrible accountant.) I would also like to thank Ayşenur Kolivar and Ender Abadoğlu who always encouraged me generously not only by opening their library and archive but also motivated me to work in this field. Our long conversations about ‘identity’, furthermore, assisted me in discovering my main arguments.
I am indebted to Kim Bowen for her time and hard work. She was a lifesaver as I revised the text, and I hope to work together with this young ethnomusicologist again!
I am deeply grateful to all of my interviewees for the time they kindly reserved to help me with this project. I must particularly mention Birol Topaloğlu here, for sharing his sincere opinions and experiences. I am also thankful to Songül for her generous offering of access to interviews conducted for the BGST archive.
I would like to present my warm and sincere thanks to the members of Dalepe Nena, Refika, Ömür and Musti K; who have been there for me with their friendship, help and understanding.
My deep gratitude goes to my dearest family Sevim, Mehmet, Elif, Yasemin, Halil Can—you have stayed beside me and supported me during my most stressful moments.
Last, but not least, thanks to Besri, for being my most thorough critic, support and invaluable advice. I am indebted to his inspirational sociological imagination for the development of some of my arguments.
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………………………….. 1 CHAPTER II: THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CONTEMPORARY LAZ IDENTITY………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
9
A Brief History of the Term ‘Laz’…………………………………………………………………………. 9 Tea Production and the Domestication of the State in the Laz Region………………… 12 The Effects of the Cultural Policies of the Nation State on the Laz Identity…………. 21 The Constitution of the Laz Identity in Antagonism to the Kurdish Identity………… 43 CHAPTER III: CHALLENGING THE EXISTING REPRESENTATIONS OF LAZ TO INTRODUCE A NEW LAZ IDENTITY………………………………….…………………………………….
48
The Replacement of Experience by Representation……………………………………………. 48 The Laz Cultural Movement: Reconstructing the Temporal and Spatial Dimensions of the Laz Identity…………………………………………………………………………….
56
History: Glorifying the Golden Age of Colchis……………………………………………………… 63 The ‘Loss’ of the Language………………………………………………………………………………….. 67 Constructing the Laz Culture……………………………………………………………………………….. 70 An Institution between the Intellectuals and the People: Sima………………………...... 80 Multiculturalist Discourse as a New Governmental Tool…………………………….......... 84 CHAPTER IV: A CRITICAL REFLECTION ON CULTURAL PERFORMANCES AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN TURKEY……………………………………………………………………………..
88
Performance as a Critical Tool…………………………………………………………………………….. 88 The Traditional Context and the Popular Representation of Laz Music until the 2000s…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
91
Kazım Koyuncu and the Emergence of a New Laz Representation………………………. 103 Authenticity of ‘Black Sea Rock’ Music……………………………………………..................... 117 Music and Politics in the Twenty First Century Turkey………………………………………… 121 The Function and the Limits of the Multilingual Repertoire………………………………… 125 The Laz as Good Citizens of Multicultural Turkey………………………………………………… 129 “This is not a Rebel Song”……………………………………………………………………………………. 138 CHAPTER V: CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………………………… 149 BIBLIOGRAPHY……………………………………………………………………………………………………. 154
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CHAPTER I:
INTRODUCTION
This research aims to examine how the second generation of Laz migrants came
to associate themselves with Laz identity through particular cultural performances that
have been taking place in the major metropolitan cities of Turkey in the 2000s. My main
concern is to find out and analyze how Lazness is defined and constructed within the
mainstream discourses expressed through music and dance performances. I consider this
question significant because Laz identity has increasingly turned into a highly contested
domain within which some attempt to negotiate their identity with Turkish nationalism,
and others alternatively try to open a space for Laz identity within the discourse and
practices of the recent wave of multiculturalism.
I find it particularly important to conduct research on this subject because there
are no academic studies that approach Laz ethnic/cultural identity from a full-fledged
sociological perspective in Turkey despite the existence of several anthropological
studies carried out by researchers outside of Turkey.1 In general, this negligence can be
attributed to the overall perception of the Laz identity even though the “Laz” are
frequently paid lip-service when listing the ethnic minorities in Turkey2, Laz identity has
not yet been made a subject of comprehensive study and debate either in academy or in
politics. As I will attempt to explore in this study, I believe this situation is strongly
related to the historical context of Laz identity.
1 Ildiko Beller Hann, 1999; Meeker, 1971; Ascherson, 2001; Chris M. Hann, 1990 2 One can easily see the frequent use of the rhyme “Türkü Kürdü Ermenisi Lazı Çerkezi…”.
2
Besides my personal experience in a middle-class Laz family surrounded by a
Laz community in Istanbul, my particular interest in this subject has been generated
largely by cultural events and organizations in which I found myself involved since the
Laz language course I accidentally attended at Özgür Üniversite in 2000.3 Upon
attending this course I became a member of a female band, Dalepe Nena, singing in Laz
and other Black Sea languages. These events were mainly in the field of music and
dance around which, I strongly believe, the claims of cultural identity are re-shaped and
re-constructed.
In addition to the performances in which I participated, I also worked for the
Gola organization from 2006 to 2009 to produce the Yeşil Yayla Kültür, Sanat ve Çevre
Festivali. This festival takes place in diverse sites around the Eastern Black Sea and has
been subjected to hot political debates about ethnic identity in the region.4 Apart from
these experiences in the cultural realm, for one and a half years, I have been working in
the catering business running a Black Sea cuisine restaurant in Istanbul, which has
helped me understand the performance of cultural identity through the concept of
‘consumption’. These experiences as a participant observer have formed a comparative
advantage for me in realizing my proposed research goals.
3 Özgür Üniversite is an independent foundation which provides alternative courses as well as workshops and seminars to university curriculum particularly in social sciences.
4 One of the USA originated sponsor of the festival triggered the conspiracy theories claiming the organizers having an intention to provoke the Laz nationalism in the region while the festival’s events were designed to flourish the Laz culture through revitalizing the public memory. Furthermore, the conspiracy theories about Gola and the organizers diversified according to the music groups took place such as; Kardeş Türküler associated with the Kurdish nationalism while Helesa (singing in Hemşin language) provoked the Armenian identity conflict in the region. Those facts circulated widely in the region once it took place in the national media.
3
I care about the notion of ‘experience’ especially because it enables me to
understand how subjectivities are created in a social and historical context. Joan W.
Scott argues that, “experience is at once always already an interpretation and is in need
of interpretation. What counts as experience is neither self-evident nor straightforward;
it is always contested, always therefore political”.5 Studying one's own community
always implies the problem of keeping enough distance with the research subject as well
as the risk of falling into subjectivity and essentialism. Based on the above concerns
related to experience, it was also important for me to avoid essentialism, so I focused on
the concepts of ‘practice’ and ‘discourse’ as Abu-Lughod suggests.6 Given that, the
performances provided me with the most appropriate research field.
James Clifford reminds us that we can better understand cultural identity not by
studying the artifacts of museums or libraries, but through observing emergent
performances. Moreover, “increasingly, language, narrative and performance have
become spaces in which diasporic identities are being explored as ways of producing
locality”.7 As my primary goal in this thesis is to explore the changing context of the
‘Laz identity’ in the last decade, it was crucial to investigate the cultural performances of
the Laz that have emerged in this period in the urban context to such an extent that
5 Joan W. Scott, “Experience” in Feminists Theorize the Political, (Eds.) Judith Butler and Joan W. Scott, London: Routledge, 1992, p.37 Cited in Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004, p. 24
6Lila Abu-Lughod, “Writing Against Culture” in Recapturing Anthropology, Richard Fox (Ed.) Santa Fe: School of American Research, 1991, p. 472
7 A. Appadurai,' Sovereignty Without T erritoriality: Notes for a Postcolonial Geography, The Geography of Identity”, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996 cited in Leyla Neyzi,“Embodied Elders: Space and Subjectivity in the Music of Metin-Kemal Kahraman” Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 38, No. 1, 2002, p. 90
4
Lazness has been identified with music and dance nowadays. Therefore, my main
concern is to understand the contextual framework of those performances, that transform
an ‘invisible’ identity to an excessively ‘visible’ one. Thus, by using the performance
theory, I believe that one can look into fields otherwise closed off to critical inquiry.
Moreover, performance theory enabled me to conceptualize the ‘identity’ contextually.
Performance theory has been popular in the recent studies in sociology
particularly related to the identity issue. That is probably because performances are
significant as they have the potential to embody, reflect and shape the ‘identity’. The
concept of identity deployed here is therefore not an essentialist, but a strategic and
positional one. Focusing on the very historical process by which it is produced is
important.
That is to say, directly contrary to what appears to be its settled semantic career,
this concept of identity does not signal that stable core of the self, unfolding from
beginning to end through all the vicissitudes of history without change, the bit of the self
which remains always-already 'the same', identical to itself across time.8 In order to
historicize the constitution of Laz identity, it was also crucial to investigate the Turkish
nation-building process. While doing that, I focused on how the Laz responded to and
internalized the assimilation policies that were employed for constructing the ‘nation’.
At this point, the concept of ‘personalization of history’9 allowed me to observe the
8 Stuart Hall, “Who Needs ‘Identity’?” in Questions of Cultural Identity, edited by Stuart Hall and Paul du Gay, Sage Publications, London, 1998, p. 3
9 Meltem Ahıska, Radyonun Sihirli Kapısı: Garbiyatçılık ve Politik Öznellik, Metis Yayınları, İstanbul, 2005
5
effects of the Turkish experience of modernism on the individuals, particularly the ones
from Laz origin.
In this respect, the role of tea farming which was introduced and subsidized by
the state from the 1950s onwards has been crucial in enabling the ‘domestication’ of the
state in the Laz region. The middle-class position of the Laz which was achieved with
tea farming was considerably influential in the formation of the contemporary Laz
identity concurrent with earlier historical positions of the Laz.
Once we accept that identities are constructed within and, not outside, discourse,
we need to understand them as produced in specific historical and institutional sites
within specific discursive formations and practices, by specific enunciative strategies.10
Hence my interest about the discourses of the so-called ‘Laz Cultural Movement’, which
emerged in the 1990s as an attempt to challenge the conventional Laz stereotype that
was shaped and reflected within the hegemonic discourse. When I reviewed the
productions of these contemporary Laz intellectuals, I found out that the primary
concern has been to eradicate the pejorative connotations of Laz identity and revitalize
‘Laz culture’, which was said to be ‘dissolved’ dramatically due to the assimilation
policies of the nation state. However, the intellectuals’ vision was rather different from
the people’s expectations and perceptions about Lazness. This is why their efforts were
rather marginalized and failed to turn into a mass movement.
In the 2000s, the monolithic structure of the ‘nation’ has considerably lost its
legitimacy due to the concurrent facts that have made “the national” identity the target of
10 Stuart Hall, “Who Needs ‘Identity’?” in Questions of Cultural Identity, edited by Stuart Hall and Paul du Gay, Sage Publications, London, 1998, p. 4
6
increasing challenges and questioning, such as globalism, Kurdish Political Movement,
etc. in Turkey. Thus, the new millennium brought about celebrations of multicultural
differences in a relative manner. Music turned to be one of the significant realms of the
articulation of ‘multiculturalist’ discourses, which, for example, employed the metaphor
of ‘mosaic’ to describe the togetherness of different ‘cultures’ in this period. Within this
historical context, Kazım Koyuncu’s music and his personality became a phenomenon
not only for the Laz but also for the Black Sea Diaspora. Concurrent with many facts, I
interpret this phenomenon as a response of the people to the nation state’s cultural
policies which was constituted on the hierarchical dichotomy of ‘modern’ vs. ‘tradition’.
Despite some other musicians and bands performing Laz music, I suggest that
Koyuncu played an important role in changing the perceptions of Lazness in Turkey. I
argue that not only Kazım Koyuncu but also his followers who created ‘Black Sea Rock’
as a musical genre transformed the ‘invisible, pejorative, primitive’ connotations of Laz
identity to a ‘desired’ one. That actually meant the realization of one of the goals of the
Laz intellectuals: making the Laz visible in the public sphere.
A so-called ‘cultural identity’ necessarily corresponds to a ‘political identity’.
However, each of these identities is at best a cultural construct, a political or ideological
construct, that is, ultimately, a historical construct.11 Apparently, the ‘Laz identity’ that
has emerged as a construct of the market, the multiculturalism discourse and the cultural
expectations of the Laz seems to have reconciled those two groups -the intellectuals and
the people- in defining a sort of ‘acceptable locality’. In other words Laz identity was re-
11 Jean-François Bayart, The Illusion of Cultural Identity, University of Chicago Press (Co-published with C. Hurst & Co.), 2005, p. ix
7
shaped in way that was not demanding anything apart from performing music and dance,
in contrast for example with the Kurds or the Armenians, that is, the ‘dangerous’
identities.
Firth says that “what music (pop) can do is put into play a sense of identity that
may or may not fit the way we are placed by other social facts.” 12 Thus, I will treat the
potential of these performances for constructing an ‘identity’ in two respects: whether
they are opening up any realm of subjectivity for the Laz or they are constructing new
stereotypes and consequently closing any possibility for the expression of ‘experiences’
of the Laz themselves.
One of the significant outcomes of my research has been to find the intercourse
of the Laz identity with the Kurdish identity. Either in the productions of the Laz
intellectuals or the contemporary musical performances, it is possible to observe a direct
or indirect reference to the Kurdish identity. The Kurdish problem due to its political
centrality today occupies a very significant place in the discussion of identities in
Turkey. This has also been valid for my research since comparing the position of Kurds
with the Laz was inevitable as the two ethnic groups have common characteristics in
terms of bilingualism, rural origin, and indigenousness in Anatolia.
With this research project, I hope to contribute to the critique of the nation state’s
cultural policies, which were employed from the beginning of the Turkish Republic to
determine the people’s cultural identity by constituting a hierarchical scaling between
the ‘local’ and ‘national’ through the concept of ‘modernity’. The contemporary cultural
12 S. Frith: ‘Towards an Aesthetic of Popular Music’, Music and Society: the Politics of Composition, Performance, and Reception, ed. R. Leppert and S. McClary, Cambridge, 1987, p. 149
8
policies, on the other hand, while pretending that they ‘recognize’ the cultural
differences through ‘multiculturalist’ discourses, tend to conceal the oppressive policies
that still continue, and construct new hierarchies in the society.
During my studies, I benefited from several methodologies. First of all, the main
arguments were shaped in the light of my own experiences and the notes that I have
taken through years. Moreover, I attended as many cultural performances as I could, and
benefitted from the methods of oral history and short interviews. In addition to these,
discourse analysis has been the primary methodological tool that has enabled me to
problematize and analyze the data I have collected from diverse sources such as books,
magazines, and interviews.
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CHAPTER II:
THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CONTEMPORARY LAZ
IDENTITY
In this chapter, I will attempt to expose the economic and social conditions that
have shaped the contemporary Laz identity. In this context, I will discuss the role of tea
farming in transforming the Laz from the lower class peasants into middle class urban
dwellers. I will also analyze the impact of the Republican cultural policies in
externalizing the local traditional values in line with the modernization project which
positioned the Laz within the hegemonic discourse as ‘loyal citizens’ to the state.
A Brief History of the Term ‘Laz’
The words such as Laz, Lazi or Lazepe in Laz language, Lazlar in Turkish, Lazi
or Č’ani in Georgian signify an ethnic group native to the Black Sea coastal regions of
Turkey and Georgia. Even though there are discussions about the historical roots and the
specific location, the Laz are said to be one of the chief tribes of the ancient civilization
of Colchis13. Another historical information that I would like to emphasize is the
conventional mission attributed to the Laz as guardians of the Caucasian border both
during the Byzantium or the Ottoman period.14 The Laz were initially early adopters of
Christianity during the Byzantium era in the 4th century, and subsequently they
13 Ali İhsan Aksamaz, 1997, p. 19; Ildiko Beller Hann, 1999, p.19; Meeker, 1971, p.336; Ascherson, 2001, p. 253
14 Michael Meeker, 1971, p.325; İsmail Avcı, 1999, p.29
10
converted to Sunni Islam of the Hanefi sect during the Ottoman rule of the Caucasus in
the 16th century.15
During Byzantine times, with the gradual assimilation of the Pontic tribes into
the Byzantine Empire, the word Colchis gave way to the term Laz which was then
extended to designate the Pontic peoples extending from Trabzon to Batum as a whole,
analogous to the same term that is commonly used in contemporary Turkey.16
The people in Turkey use the name "Laz" in a general way to refer to all
inhabitants of Turkey's Black Sea provinces to the east of Samsun, and the word is often
associated with certain social stereotypes. Trabzon Chronicles in 1906 refers to this
mix-up in the following way :
Even though all the dwellers of this region are called Laz, no doubt it derives from ignorance. Because Laz have distinguishing features with their language, customs and way of life.17
Similarly, the Laz themselves are increasingly keen on differentiating themselves
from other inhabitants of these regions. The non-Laz community commonly refer to the
Laz community as “Mohti/ Komohti-Laz”18, meaning “real Laz” to emphasize their
bilingual characteristic. There seems to be no doubt that this has been a stable linguistic
frontier for many generations. The Laz speak the Laz language which is related to
15 Ali İhsan Aksamaz, 1997, p.39, Recai Özgün, 1996, p.85
16 Michael E. Meeker 1971, p. 337 ; Chris M. Hann, 1990, p. 5
17 Ismail Avcı, “Lazlarda Sosyokültürel Değişim”, Unpublished MA Thesis, International Relations Department, İstanbul University, 2002, p.6
18 Mohti/Komohti means ‘come’ in Laz language.
11
Mingrelian, Georgian and Svan (South Caucasian languages).19 Yet the Laz language is
not a written one: Turkish and Georgian serve as the literary languages for the Laz in
Turkey and Georgia, respectively. Therefore, the Laz are typically bilingual.
Today most Laz speakers live in the Northeast of Turkey, formerly known as
Lazistan (modern Rize and Artvin provinces) in a narrow strip of land along the shore of
the Black Sea. They form the majority in Pazar (Atina), Ardeşen (Art'aşeni) and Fındıklı
(Vitze) districts of Rize, and in Arhavi (Ark'abi) and Hopa (Xopa) districts of Artvin.
They live as minorities in the neighbouring Çamlıhemşin (Vijadibi) and Borçka districts.
There are also communities in northwestern Anatolia (Karamürsel in Kocaeli, Akçakoca
in Düzce, Sakarya, Zonguldak, Bartın), where many immigrants have settled since the
Turko-Russian War (1877-1878), and now there are also Laz people in Istanbul, Ankara
and other big cities of Turkey and in European countries.
In all these regions, the Laz people live together with Hemşin people --who
either speak an ancient Armenian dialect or its Turkish accent-- as well as with
Georgians, Turks and, relatively more distantly, with the Pontic Greeks in the west. That
means there are common cultural characteristics shared with those ethnic groups
particularly in music, dance, language and cuisine.
Most of the people of the Laz region would presumably acknowledge a
collective identity of Laz like in the recent past, although those west of Pazar would
probably have preferred local destinations such as Rizeli, Çayelili. We can also say that
Laz people are very likely to refer to their hometowns instead of a city when someone
19 Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.) Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International, 2005 Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com/
12
asks about their origin. This is just because the Laz region in Eastern Black Sea is
divided into the two cities of Rize and Artvin. However, just to differentiate their
identity from the non-Laz community, they also refer to the name of their town such as
Pazarlı, Fındıklılı, Arhavili as these are commonly known as Laz districts.
Tea Production and the Domestication of the State in the Laz Region
In my research project, as I concentrated on the construction of Laz identity
mainly in Istanbul, I found that the tea industry is an important contextual aspect shaping
the contemporary identities of the Laz migrants. Hence, I will start with the recent
economic history of the Laz region in the Eastern Black Sea. As I will elaborate upon
later in this text, I claim that today the Laz identity that came into prominence is highly
influenced by its historical relations with the state. In order to explain this relation, I find
it extremely important to dwell on the history of tea farming which engendered the
‘domestication’ of the state in the Laz region. I use the term ‘domestication’ to denote
the recognition, being recognized and internalizing of the nation state as Hann
conceptualized in his research from 1983 to 1988 in a Laz village Sümer in Fındıklı,
Rize. 20
The traditional economy in the region was based on agriculture and the
production of hazelnuts, maize, rice, and hemp until the 1950s, when the introduction of
tea cultures began. They have grown in importance since then. Another aspect of this
20 Chris M. Hann, Tea and the Domestication of the Turkish State, The Eothen Press, Cambridgeshire, England, 1990, p 66
13
former economy is the export of labor. Older male members of the family used to go
abroad to metropolises, particularly in Soviet Russia, to work in the service industry. 21
The mobility of the Laz via sea routes, particularly to flourishing Russian ports on the
Black Sea,22 gave them trading opportunities that were not available to the peasants of
other parts of Anatolia. 23 Early Laz migrants going to the metropolises of Turkey
generally worked in the service industry like their Hemşinli neighbours.
Tea farming was introduced in the region in the 1930s and just after the passing
of the tea law in 1940, it rapidly became the main product of the region from the eastern
coast of Artvin to the few towns of western Trabzon. The introduction of the tea industry
eliminated the hitherto closed-economy, the self-rearing way of life. Tea farming’s
pivotal role has been the key factor in the Laz community’s change from a relatively
autonomous position to becoming a subsidiary to the state. This is because tea farming
was primarily encouraged and subsidized by the state itself—particularly during the
Democrat Party’s term in the 1950s. Even though there have been other entrepreneurs
since 1986, the state-owned Çaykur, based in Rize, is still the biggest and the most
stable tea company in the country.
Like other districts near Trabzon, the valleys of the Rize region were not subject
to effective central power, rather they remained, until the last hundred years or so, under
21 Uğur Biryol, Hemşin Pastası, İletişim Yayınevi, İstanbul, 2007
22 Esat Sarı, “Çay Üreticileri Gözden Çıkarıldı mı?” , Mjora Lazepeşi Nena, Sayı 2, Çivi Yazıları Yayınevi, İstanbul, 2000, p.10
23 Chris M. Hann, Tea and the Domestication of the Turkish State, The Eothen Press, Cambridgeshire, England,1990, p. 7
14
the influence of their own notables, the ‘great family aghas.24 Certainly this region had
long maintained close contacts with the centre, e.g., through its traditions of military and
naval service. Laz loyalty to the Ottoman state was nourished throughout the long period
when their territory was threatened by Russian expansion into the Caucasus, and the
initial stimulus of the regional economy in the 1920s may well have been in part
motivated by the desire to ensure that the loyalty of a vulnerable frontier region would
be smoothly transferred to the new republican power, 25 as it had been the case in the
past.
Benefiting from state subsidization of tea farming, community living in the Laz
region in the Eastern Black Sea became almost dependent on the state with a navel cord.
Before 1950, Rize was doubly remote, being on the periphery of an already peripheral
state. Following the expulsion of the Pontic Greeks, previously very influential in Black
Sea commercial life, the prospects for the emergence here of a modern bourgeois society
receded still further.26 In Zihni Derin’s27 factory and research station, however, and in
the tea law of 1940, the foundation of changes to come had already been laid. In the
absence of a native bourgeoisie, it was the strong state which necessarily played the
decisive role in transforming the Rize region. 28 The Laz region owed its economic
24 Michael E. Meeker, “The Great Family Aghas of Turkey: A Study of a Changing Political Culture”, in R. Antounan ı. Harik (eds.) Rural Politics and Social Change in the Middle East (Bloomington, Indiana University Pres, 1972, p.237-66 Cited in Chris M. Hann, 1990
25 Chris M. Hann, 1990, p. 61
26 ibid, p. 11
27 The agriculturalist staff of the state Zihni Derin had a leading role in bringing tea farming to the region.
28 Chris M. Hann, 1990, p. 11
15
boom to statist principles based paradoxically on the Democrat Party’s general anti-
statist attitude who ruled the country in 1950s.
Tea farming enabled the state to embody itself in the Laz region physically via
tea collecting centers (çay alım evleri) and factories. People collect their land’s tea and
bring it to the centers; almost every village has its own collecting center nowadays. After
collection, the tea goes to the factories in order to undergo the tea drying and packaging
process.
Tea farming became an important source of employment for Laz men who had
previously gone abroad for work: they could now work at collecting centers or in the
factories. Most men (this wage-labour force has always been almost exclusively male)
obtained unskilled jobs, with contracts guaranteeing only 120 days annually. Moreover
they earned a state pension after only twenty years.29
State investments in tea factories were supplemented by some important
infrastructure improvements completed at about the same time—notably the building of
modern roads along the coast. This greatly sped up communications within the Rize
region.30 The state’s existence was ironically only made possible by opening up roads to
the villages in order to deliver tea leaves collected from the villages to the factories. The
pathways were not wide enough for state transport vehicles. These roadways, in turn,
enabled both male and female family members to go to the town center (çarşı/noğa)
much more often. This had rapid impacts on the consumption habits. Villagers went to
29 ibid, p. 14
30 ibid, p. 12
16
the market to buy products that they had traditionally produced on their own (such as
bread, vegetables, cloths, etc).
As tea cultivation progressed, the importance of other agricultural products
declined, and the Rize region had to import considerable quantities of agricultural
produce from elsewhere. Local markets and shops also carried much new merchandise
for which there was now an effective cash demand in the region. In short, the region
began to experience an economic boom due entirely to the expansion of a single crop. 31
Eventually, tea farming caused a dramatic change primarily in the material culture in a
short period of time.
The transformation of the material culture inevitably caused a dramatic change in
other aspects of the culture. For example, by tea farming, the collective work
phenomenon (meci/imece) almost disappeared as the form of public sphere changed, and
so the related cultural elements like performing work songs consequently. Similarly, by
the urbanization process, the weddings and many rituals (particularly music and dance)
were transformed when they were moved from villages to the wedding halls in the town
or city centers.
Despite the enterprise of the state for the tea industry, public infrastructure and
other sectors of the region did not develop. So, the Black Sea region is still on the top of
the list for sending immigrants. In addition, during the Özal period in the 1980s, who
came to power in 1983, the earlier generous subsidies to the tea industry were cut off by
allowing the entrance of the private capital into the tea industry. The pricing went down
31 ibid, p. 15
17
after that year; and even though the production went up by transforming more lands to
tea fields the earlier income-generating position of tea farming was altered radically.32
As I have noted before, tea farming could not stop the migration from the region
to the big cities. Several factors that seem to have contributed the high rate of migration
to urban centers of Turkey could be summarized as follows: first of all, the valuable
income-generating position of the tea changed after the 1980s’ liberal economic
politicies where the state’s primary role on the economy was curtailed. Moreover, the
land was fragmented into very small parcels in line with the patrimonial inheritance
customs. Insignificant diversification of the economy outside of tea and the insufficient
social and cultural infrastructural developments encouraged the new middle class
generation to migrate from the region.
Since the state subsidies to the Laz farmers were enormous, they could save
relatively large amounts of money by working in the factories or in the tea collecting
points or as tea farmers. This later enabled them to buy modern apartments or to found
small businesses in the metropolises. Even though they were not extremely wealthy,
they had economic advantages over peasants migrating from the other parts of Anatolia.
Since tea farming requires only five months of labor in the whole year and it is a
women-oriented production, even after families moved to the cities the female
member(s) of the family continued to go to the hometown in the tea collecting season
(three or four times from March-August) and come back to a husband who was free to
work in the service sector or state offices. Even if their entire working lives were spent
elsewhere, migrants did not give up their share of their patrimony. Some were successful
32 ibid, p. 29
18
in establishing themselves in cities such as Istanbul, but even these retained their lands
in the region.33 For those who have even a tiny piece of land in their hometown, this
means an extra source of income from tea.
Tea farming supported by the state obviously enabled the Laz to have upward
mobility in terms of class. The average middle class families moved to metropolises
while lower middle classes moved to town centers in the region. Both bought their own
houses by using money saved from the tea industry. So we can say that the ones who are
still living in the region are mostly from lower middle classes. On the other hand, the life
in the villages is almost dead, apart from the temporary summer population, due to the
dramatic migration movements.
There are many families that have such a life cycle and they differ, with their
strong ties with the region, from the upper class migrants who migrated abroad or to the
urban centers earlier via maritime or construction businesses.
Since the end of 1990s, tea fields have ceased to generate profits and it has not
paid the families to go back to their home regions to collect the tea. In this case, they
either hire workers to collect the tea or leave half of the profit to the sharecropper
(yarıcı). While the sharecropper is either from the family or village, the workers consist
of people who have come from different regions over time. Some workers have been
from the central Black Sea region, (from Ordu etc,) some are Kurds (who demand the
lowest wages) and as a new trend, there are Georgian migrants. This new relationship
introduced a certain type of discrimination amongst some Laz. As this relationship
33 ibid, p 8
19
sharpened the hierarchical class positions between the Laz and Kurds, already hostile
due to the prejudices in urban centers.34
Floya Anthias’ argument about identity is helpful to formulate the perception of
the identity of the Laz in connection to the notion of ‘class’. She argues that the “issues
of exclusion, political mobilization on the basis of collective identity, and narrations of
belonging and otherness cannot be addressed adequately unless they are located within
other constructions of difference and identity, particularly around gender and class.”35
Thus, I define the contemporary Laz identity in the urban context, as constituted with the
middle class values. In this respect, I would like to emphasize the adoption of the
hegemonic cultural discourse which made it possible to avoid any marginalization.
Considering the transformation from lower class peasants to middle class
community by tea farming, one can say that the Laz community has been quite
privileged by the Turkish state. This privilege consequently led them to identify
positively with the state; rather than against it,36 concurrent with their historical mission
of being ‘custodians of the border’. Moreover, the state’s imposition of administrative
boundaries and the consolidation of village infrastructure have helped to induce some
new feelings of community.37 We should also take into account that ‘tea’ has turned into
34 Aslı Odman says that as the primary workers of the ship yards (tershane) in Tuzla were from Black Sea, they became qualified workers compared with after coming Kurds in 1990s with forced migration. This jobshare eventually caused to a hierarchical order and conflict within the workers. (Seminar in Gola Kültür, Sanat ve Ekoloji Derneği, 16 February 2009)
35 Floya Anthias, “New Hybridities, Old Concepts: The Limit of ‘Culture’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Vol. 24, No. 4, July 2001, p. 620
36 Chris M. Hann, Tea and the Domestication of the Turkish State, The Eothen Press, Cambridgeshire, England, 1990, p. 66
37 ibid, p. 65
20
a national symbol in the last fifty years. That also connected the Laz to the nation as
producers of a ‘national beverage’.
The domestication of the state enabled the majority of the Laz to identify with
it—to feel themselves to be, for the first time, members of a national society while many
other citizens remained subject to arbitrary power, and large groups including the entire
Kurdish minority, for example, was excluded from full societal membership
meanwhile.38 That is to say, while the economical and social deprivation by the state
constituted the Kurdish identity around a lower class position, those benefits and
recognition by the state constituted the Laz identity around a middle class position.
Amongst migrants going to the metropolis and the ones staying in the Laz
region, identification with Turkish nationalism has grown stronger since the 1990s. This
is the result of many factors. One of the reasons is the domestication of the state as I
have mentioned. Another reason is no doubt the cultural policies of the Turkish state
since the foundation of the Republic where the ethnic elements were severely despised
and the notion of citizenship was idealized within a Turkification process which was
well established in modernization discourse. The message to the people was, “if you
want to be a part of the civilized, modern nation, you have to leave your ‘old-fashioned’
cultural elements”. In the next section, I would like to review how the cultural policies
of the Turkish republic shaped the contemporary Laz identity where the majority of the
Laz express their patriotism and loyalty to the state at every opportunity today.
38 ibid, p. 73
21
The Effects of the Cultural Policies of the Nation State on the Laz Identity
As states are not only functional bureaucratic apparatuses, but also powerful
actors seeking to dominate the realm of culture, my aim is also to uncover the
ideological nature of the state’s representation of the Laz identity. Symbolic systems are
imbued with power, and various social subjects are constituted by and, in turn,
manipulate these representations and their meanings. Here, culture is not used simply as
an entity that expresses ‘given’ and ‘distinctive’ sets of values but as ‘constructed’ and
‘contingent’ regarding its relation to the nation-state and nationalism.39
The basic goal of the architects of national cultures is to provide a link between
membership to the political community (state) and belonging to the cultural community
(nation), both of which are necessary to confer the status of citizenship. Relying on a
modernist programme of culture, states in the West and the rest of the world during the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries have maintained active policies to shape their own
citizens.40
Charles Tilly defines a ‘top-down’ or ‘state-led’ nationalism where the sovereign
state seeks to create a nation by describing and determining its nature and boundaries. Its
pioneers have two functions: a) to reform the existing state and b) to modernize people
believed to be ‘backward’; reforming the state and modernizing the people are closely
connected to the formation of the nation including “standardized national languages,
39 Yılmaz Çolak, “Nationalism and the State in Turkey: Drawing the Boundaries of ‘Turkish Culture’ in the 1930s”, Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 3/1, 2003, p. 4
40 Tony Bennett, “Culture: A Reformer’s Science”, London: Sage Publication. 1998, p.104 Cited in Yılmaz Çolak, 2003,p. 3
22
national histories, pageants, ceremonies, songs, banners, museums, schools, and much
more”.41
During the foundation and the following years of the new Turkish Republic,
‘Kemalist nationalism’ can be considered as a top-down, or state-led, nationalism
according to Tilly’s definition. Its first goal was to modernize the state and social
structures through a project of social engineering. It was a vigorous search from above
for the creation of a new nation and the invention of a new Turk by eliminating the
popular notions of Islam and Ottoman heritage. Its project of turning existing more-or-
less ethnically and culturally heterogeneous people into a nation depended on the binary
logic of ‘old’ and ‘new’. 42 Here, the aim was to transform society by transmuting all
traditional structures into a ‘developed’ and ‘civilized’ whole; that is, society became a
target for constructing a ‘better’ future. 43
The new cultural institutions of the Republic, as both producers and carriers of
the official discourse on ‘culture’, became the basic agents for “promoting and imposing
a ‘national and secular way of life’ that comprised of prescriptions for people about how
to think, perceive life and act. This mentality was seen in terms of the collective notions
that the civilizing rulers strove to make part of everyday practice”.44
41 Charles Tilly, ‘The State of Nationalism’, Critical Review 10, 2, 1996, p. 299-306. Cited in in Yılmaz Çolak, 2003, p. 3
42 Mahmut E. Bozkurt, Atatürk Íhtilali. 2nd edn. İstanbul: Kaynak Yay (1st edn. İstanbul Üniv. Yay., 1940) 1995 Cited in Yılmaz Çolak, 2003, p. 5
43B. Parekh, ‘Ethnocentricity of the Nationalist Discourse’, Nations and Nationalism 1, 1, 1995, p.25-52
44 Yılmaz Çolak, 2003, p. 14
23
Culture as an idea and discourse seemed to express the construction of a
‘modern’ society and ‘civilized’ citizens. Yılmaz says, “the state discourse on culture
did not accept the equal value of all forms of life and assumed a strict hierarchy among
them. It is hierarchical and radically assimilationist. By setting a strict hierarchy between
‘archaic’, ‘backward’ life forms and ‘modern’, ‘civilized’ ones and applying coercive
and non-coercive radical assimilation policies, the politics of culture in the early
Republican regime constituted a set of processes employing both exclusion and
inclusion.” 45
The Turkish state’s nation-building process as a whole far exceeds the limits of
this research, but I would like to mention some institutions and practices which help to
explain how the new nation was imagined and consequently shaped by the Turkish state.
Three new state-controlled institutions were rather influential in this context: the Turkish
History Society (THS, which worked to write a new history based on a secular past), the
Turkish Language Society (TLS, which tried to create a value-free Turkish language),
and the People’s Houses (the centers of adult education) were established in 1931.
Through the activities of the THS and the TLS the two theses, the Turkish history and
language theses, were sustained. Both theses were used to prove that all civilizations
were of Turkish origin; that is, Turkish history and language was the mother of world
culture. Moreover, the People’s Houses were founded to carry out the people’s
education and training (halk terbiyesi) through a nation-wide network of practicing new
modes of behaviour beside the regular school education.
45 ibid, p. 15
24
Hann also makes a crucial point about the role of formal education on the Laz
identity: “It is extremely important to note that economic benefits were matched by
improvements in the educational system. The very high value placed on formal
schooling is another major feature in the contemporary self-image of the Laz, and
certainly seemed to me to be borne out in practice. In turn, education influenced trends
in migration: those who left Rize were less likely to seek work on ships or in pastry-
shops, but increasingly aspired to occupy high positions within the rapidly expanding
hierarchies of politics and administration (centered in Ankara), and in commercial life
(still concentrated in Istanbul)”. 46
The expectation from this sort of education was to make the nation a collective
whole sharing a similar ideal47. The Houses functioned to realize the westernization
project through social and cultural activities48 where modes of behaving, dressing,
speaking, attending a public meeting or concert, and modes of eating were shown in
explicit or implicit ways to the masses. In order to appropriate the local cultural elements
to the westernization project, the compilations of cultural products were highly
significant.49 The attempts starting from 1924, to “collect” and “select” folk songs were
done through “vouchers” sent to the music teachers in peripheral regions who were
charged with making local contacts with the local musicians, compiling folk songs and
46 Chris M. Hann, Tea and the Domestication of the Turkish State, The Eothen Press, Cambridgeshire, England,1990, p. 20
47 Recep Peker, ‘Halkevleri Açılma Nutku’, Ülkü 1 (February): 6-8. 1933 Cited in Yılmaz Çolak, 2003, p.7
48Arzu Özturkmen, Folklor ve Milliyetçilik, İstanbul: İletişim Yayınları, 1998, p. 70
49 ibid, p. 71
25
recording them by using Western classical written note technique.50 These compilations
were to be used in the repertoires of Yurttan Sesler (Tunes From the Country) in state
running TRT radio station adapting the language and lyrics to the ‘Turkish folk
music’(Türk Halk Müziği).
“The nation is the political and social unit composed of citizens tied together by
the bonds of language, culture and ideal”. 51 In other words, culture together with
language and the ideal were the constitutive parts of the nation in that they were
fundamental in providing a sense of belonging to the citizens. Key to this process was
the teaching of the Turkish language and of Turkish history, in which the Turks’
civilized ancestors had shown the true way to all civilizations though their foundational
institutions including the army. Also, fine arts and especially western-style music were
privileged by the Party to instill ‘the revolutionary culture’ in the people. 52
Despite inheriting a pluralistic cultural structure from the Ottoman Empire, the
Turkish Republic constructed its nationality on a monolithic ethnicity: Turkishness.
Çagaptay posits the existence of three ‘concentric zones of Turkishness’ in the state
discourse on citizenship; the most inclusive zone, based on a territorial definition,
defines everyone within the borders of the Turkish Republic as a ‘Turk’ (or Turkish
citizen). The second zone, less encompassing than the first, is based on the religious
identity of the former Muslim millet, third, is equating all Muslims with ‘Turks’ and
50 Mustafa Poyraz Kolluoğlu, “Modernism in Ottoman Empire and Turkish Music and the Years of 1930s, 1940s”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Marmara University , International Relations Department, April 2010, p. 56
51 Yılmaz Çolak, “Nationalism and the State in Turkey: Drawing the Boundaries of ‘Turkish Culture’ in the 1930s”, Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 3/1,2003, p. 11
52 ibid, p. 11
26
fourth, but excluding non- Muslim citizens. A third zone adds Turkish ethnicity as a
criterion and is thus the most exclusionary; it means that both non-Muslims53 and non-
Turks are excluded from this definition.54 The expectation is that non-Turkish Muslims
will eventually be assimilated and this has encouraged the denial of the existence of the
non-Turkish Muslim community like Laz, Kurds, Homilies, Caucasians, etc. by the state
and most political parties.
However, a parallel awareness of the ‘not-quite Turkish ness’ of those ethnic
groups has been translated into a discourse that camouflages ethnicity and replaces it
with the ‘regional difference’ discourse. Since the “ethnic differences” were reduced to
the level of “regional differences,” all the regions were represented as if they were local
versions of ‘Turkish ness’. Moreover, the ethnic minorities began to be represented via
the common homogeneous stereotypes: Backward/ Separatist Kurds, Stupid/ Cunning/
Patriotic Lazes, etc…
Even though there is a common history within which many ethnic groups were
exposed to more or less coercion in that period, one should note the different historical
processes that occurred for different ethnic, cultural groups.
For example, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Armenians, became
a ‘minority’ in their homeland by the establishment of the nation-state through the
“massacres, deportations, forced migration and the discrimination policies”.55 Melissa
53 And non- Sunni Muslims
54 Soner Çagaptay, Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey: Who is a Turk? London and New York: Routledge, 2006. p 159-160 cited in ‘Çeliker, Anna Grabolle(2009) 'Construction of the Kurdish Self in Turkey through Humorous Popular Culture', Journal of Intercultural Studies, 30: 1, 89 — 105’ 55 Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004, p.10
27
Bill says that, “since Turkish ness, ‘Turkish national culture’ and the official ‘Turkish
History’ were constructed and shaped through the social and economic expropriation of
the local heritage and wealth, and the denial of the Armenian as well as other ethnic
identities and cultures in the nationalized territory, everything that referred to the
presence of Armenians in Anatolia was silenced”.56 In her thesis, Bilal suggests that the
experience of this ‘displacement’ and ‘loss’ define the sense of being an Armenian in
Turkey today.57 The very result of the Purification practices during the
institutionalization period of the republic has been the displacement of different ethnic
groups from the collective memories of people living in Turkey and the cultural
representations of the Anatolian geography. These groups started to be regarded as
‘foreigners’ in their homelands.58
Likewise, the Kurds experienced similar discriminatory, violent and exclusive
policies which had a decisive influence in shaping contemporary Kurdish identity.59
“The relations of domination between the state and the Kurds involved systematic
persecution, marginalization and humiliation of Kurdishness since 1925”.60 The Turkish
state’s coercive and assimilationist practices such as compulsory Turkish-language
education and military service together with practices of discrimination targeted to
56 Melissa Bilal, 2004, p.12
57 ibid, p.7
58 ibid, p. 38
59 Hakan M. Yavuz, ‘Five Stages of the Construction of Kurdish Nationalism in Turkey’, Nationalism & Ethnic Politics 7, Autumn, 2001, p. 1 Cited in Murat Tezcür, Güneş, “Kurdish Nationalism and Identity in Turkey: A Conceptual Reinterpretation”, European Journal of Turkish Studies, V. 10, 2009
60 Hamit Bozarslan, ‘Why the Armed Struggle?’ Understanding the violence in Kurdistan of Turkey’, in İbrahim Ferhad; Gürbey Gülistan (eds.) The Kurdish Conflict in Turkey, New York, St. Martin’s Press, 2000, p.187 Cited in Murat Tezcür Güneş, 2009
28
Kurdish workers in Turkish cities have contributed to the formation of a radicalized
Kurdish nationalist identity.61
When we look at the Laz people in their relationship with the Turkish state
historically, it wouldn’t be unfair to say that they were not exposed to the same level of
persecution compared to ‘dangerous identities’ such as the Kurds and Armenians.
However, the Laz also experienced pressure from asimilationist policies which
influenced the contemporary Laz identity greatly.
James Ferguson and Akhil Gupta claim that “the state (conceptually fused with
the nation) is located within an ever-widening series of circles that begins with family
and local community and ends with the system of nation-states. This is profoundly
consequential understanding of scale, one in which locality is encompassed by the
region, the region by the nation-state, and the nation state by the international
community.”62 According to their argument, “national, as opposed to local, was
positioning “lower-level” workers, “local” politicians, and “local villagers as people
who belonged to, and articulated the interests of, particular communities, with limited
generalizability across geographical areas, or across class and caste divisions.”63
Assuming the spatializing of the state, as a governmental method, they question “by
what mechanisms were certain people fixed in space as local people with local concerns
61Mustafa Saatci ‘Nation-states and ethnic boundaries: modern Turkish identity and Turkish- Kurdish conflict’, Nations and Nationalism 8 (4), October, 2002, p. 549-564. Cited in Güneş, 2009.
62 James Ferguson, Akhil Gupta, Spatializing States: Toward an Ethnography of Neoliberal Governmentality, Anthropologies of Modernity, Foucault, Governmentality, and Life Politics, Edited by: Jonathan Xavier Inda, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005, p. 106
63 ibid, p. 113
29
while others came to be seen, and to see themselves, as concerned with “larger” issues
that traversed geographical and political space.”64
Similarly, Anna Tsing’65 claims that, the nation state and global capital are the
determinant subjects who make up a ‘scaling’ enabling us to imagine what is global,
what is national and what is local. According to this scaling, I claim that the Laz
imagined themselves as a ‘local’ cultural group rather than a ‘nation’ in contrast with
Kurds or Armenians. This is the reason and also the outcome of the political position of
the Laz. Despite some efforts to describe the Laz as a nation, the Laz Cultural
Movement, an intellectual movement in 1990s, did not turn into a mass movement, a
question that I will elaborate later.
Obviously, there are some facts, as I mentioned earlier, that enabled the Laz to
‘imagine’ themselves as a part of the nation and attempted to adjust themselves within it.
But, I would like to emphasize that the hierarchical scaling between national and local
prevented the Laz culture from adapting itself to ‘the modern life’ and caused a dramatic
rupture in the public cultural memory. This rupture later enabled the Laz to imagine
themselves as ‘insufficient’ and prevented them from demanding cultural rights from the
state concurring with other facts such as not to be marked like Kurds. For example, Laz
musician Birol Topaloğlu was complaining about this fact:
We (Lazis) were made (by the state) not to think about ‘our’ music at all. When I was in the university I was interested in folk music (halk muziği) through Karacaoğlan, Aşık Veysel and other Turkish musicians therefore I started music by playing bağlama
64 ibid, p. 113
65Anna Tsing, “Inside the Economy of Appearances”, Public Culture - Volume 12, Number 1, Winter 2000, pp. 115-144
30
like my elder brothers as it was quite common. However it took me ages to think about “our” (Laz) music. We had “destans”(epic songs), “bgaras” (weeper songs) but these were not considered “music” at all. That struck me instantly and I left bağlama and started to compile destans and eventually played tulum and kemençe. 66
Similarly, I came across frequent discussions among the Laz, even if the state
would allow the Laz, for example, to broadcast in the Laz language, some argue that
they would not accomplish it. A related debate was also held about the education in the
mother language in the schools. This sense of ‘inadequacy’ makes me think that Lazness
has been emasculated and therefore lost its means to reproduce itself. I find such
accounts of the intellectuals quite significant while they are the most optimistic about the
future of the Laz culture.
Language, still one of the determinant signifiers of an ethnic group, enables
cultural members to transfer their ethnic identity to the next generations despite the
hegemonic governance of the state on the individuals. As I find a straightforward
relationship between language and ethnicity in terms of ethnic identification, I would say
that the most concrete effect of assimilation policies on Laz culture has been on Laz
language which I would like to focus on in the following section.
66 “Bizler (Lazlar) müziğimizi düşünemez hale getirildik. Üniversitedeyken halk müziği ile ilgilenmeye başladım, Karacaoğlan, Aşık Veysel ve diğer Türk ozanlarını tanıyarak diğer abilerim gibi ben de bağlamaya başladım. Kendi müziğimiz üzerine düşünmeye başlamam çok sonra oldu. Oysa destanlarımız, bgaralarımız vardı. Ama bunlar müzikten sayılmıyorlardı. Sonra birden dank etti ve bağlamayı bırakıp destanlar derlemeye başladım sonra da tulum ve kemençe çalmayı öğrendim.” The interview with the Laz musician Birol Topaloğlu, 28.4.2010, Balat
31
The Decisive Categories of the State on Language and Abandonment of the Laz
Language
When we look into the ways of cultural legitimation adopted during the early
history of the Turkish Republic, it turns to be obvious that its discourse is embedded in a
dichotomy, the traditional/modern as I referred to earlier. Modernist ideology of the
Turkish nation-state was stipulating to appropriate the local features of the culture and
give way to nationalization through a westernization process in order to go ‘forward’ in
history. In short, Turkification went hand in hand with westernization and technical
development in the agenda of the new-born republic. It would be convenient to cite
Mustafa Kemal himself in order to explore the mentality of the cultural policies of the
new republic:
There are some people who define civilization in different ways. In my opinion it is hard and unnecessary to separate civilization from culture. In order to clarify my point of view, let me explain what culture is: it is the product of all achievements of a human society in the domains of (a) state, (b) thought, that is to say, science, social science, and fine arts, and (c) economy, that is to say, agriculture, crafts, trade, transportation and communication. When one talks about a nation’s civilization, I think it may not be other than a product of all these three kind of domains. Of course, the degree of culture, or civilization, could not be the same. The difference may be seen in each sphere of life, as well as the agglomeration of three spheres. A high culture does not only belong to its owner nation, and, at the same time, has strong effects on other nations. Maybe, it is in this respect that a high and extensive culture is called civilization, such as European civilization, asr-i hazír (modern) civilization 67
67Afet A. İnan , M. Kemal Atatürk’ten Yazdıklarım (My Writings from Mustafa Kemal Atatürk). Ankara: Altínok Matbaası, 1969, p. 48, Cited in Yılmaz Çolak, 2003, p. 8
32
What is significant here is the setting of a hierarchy between a high/cultivated
culture and a local / primitive/ one. And the first is positioned as a national end to be
realized.
When I searched for the reflections of that ideology on the public memories of
the Laz, I found out that the temporality of Lazness is strongly embedded in the past.
When the past is associated with lower standards of life and hardship, then the past is
inevitably considered to be unpleasant. That is to say, Lazness which was highly
associated with being a villager (köylülük) was tried to be abandoned in order to be a
part of the civilized nation, and become a modern, acceptable citizen.
When the state encountered with a multi-cultural and consequently multi-lingual
society, this made the assimilation a harder task to achieve during its founding years. So
the first thing to do was to give priority to the national language and eliminate the other
ethnic languages by condemning their use in the public sphere. 68 A good example of
this is the ‘Vatandaş Türkçe Konuş!69’ campaigns which took place in the 1940s and
1950s70 discouraging citizens from speaking their mother languages besides Turkish in
the public sphere.71
68 Hüseyin Sadoğlu, Türkiye’de Ulusçuluk ve Dil Politikaları, İstanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınları, İstanbul, 2003, p. 36 69 Citizen! Speak Turkish!
70 Even it was not articulated that evidently, condemning of those languages in the public sphere appeared commonly until 1990s .
71 Yahya Koçoğlu, Hatırlıyorum, Metis Yayıncılık, İstanbul, Koçoğlu, Yahya, (2001) Azınlık Gençleri Anlatıyor, Metis Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 2003
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From Walter Benjamin’s72 point of view, it is the state who defines what the law
is and what is outside of the law. Thereby, its hegemony is what enables the state to
intervene in people’s languages and even forbid them despite the fact that language is a
constitutive feature of a human being. With this concept, the state constructs the people
and itself through certain categories. These categories obviously should be considered as
an extension of the ‘scaling’ of the ‘local’, ‘national’ and ‘universal’ boundaries
constituted by the state as I mentioned earlier. In order to explain my argument of how
those categories are constituted around ‘language’, let me demonstrate it with a simple
chart.
National Language:
Turkish
Ethnic Languages:
‘Others’
Modern Competent Valuable Literate
Primitive Inefficient Insignificant Oral
When the language is divided into these hierarchical binary categories, there are
two unconscious strategies left for people in order to survive: the first is to internalize
the national language and abandon their ethnic languages, and the second is to object
and fight against the state. Obviously, the Laz have chosen the first while the Kurds have
chosen the latter concurrent with their historical conditions.
72 Walter Benjamin, “Critique of Violence” Reflections, (Ed.) Hannah Arendt. Schocken Books. New York, 1986
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Now, I would like to demonstrate how the national discourse on “language”
affects peoples’ memories. The Kurdish writer Mehmed Uzun shares a related anecdote:
In Siverek, on my first school day I got a slap in the face, which I can still remember very well. We were speaking Kurdish while lining-up in the school garden. The soldier-originated teacher from Istanbul slapped me in my face to make me speak Turkish. But how! I didn’t even know Turkish!(…) I was acquainted with Turkish with a single slap! My relationship with my mother-tongue broke off since that moment.73
It is pretty striking to listen to a similar anecdote from a Laz:
I wasn’t even aware of another language at that age. What would I do if I didn’t speak Laz! Should we speak the language that our teachers did? I thought, our teachers spoke Turkish very well indeed. To be honest, we were envious of them. However it was not more than ten words that we could speak in that language, so what to do? At these times, “don’t speak Laz” meant “don’t speak at all!” At first our mouths were almost locked and we were left speechless…74
Taylor, explains how people learn to become ‘citizens” by sensing and
observing. “People not only cultivated the official look, their bodies underwent change.
Though they were generally despondent; they became increasingly alert to dangers
around them. Their senses and protective instincts became more acute. They learned to
73 "Siverek'te ilkokulun birinci günü bir tokat yedim, bugün bile aklımdan çıkmaz. Okul bahçesinde sıraya girmeye çalışırken aramızda Kürtçe konuşuyorduk. Bir tokat attı İstanbul'lu yedek subay öğretmen, Türkçe konuş diye. Ama Türkçe bilmiyordum ki(...)Ben de bir tokatla tanıştım Türkçeyle. Benim anadilimle bağım böyle koptu” (Milliyet Gazetesi 17/11/2006)
74 “…O yaşımda başka bir dilin varlığını bile bilmiyordum. Lazca konuşmayacaktım da ne konuşacaktım ki? Yoksa biz, hani şu öğretmenlerimizin konuştuğu dilden mi konuşacaktık? Öğretmenler Türkçeyi bana göre çok güzel konuşuyorlardı. Açıkçası imreniyorduk. Ama o dilden bildiğimiz on kelimeyi geçmiyordu ki, nasıl olacaktı bu iş? O zamanlar bizim için “Lazca konuşma” demek, “Hiç konuşma” demekle eşti. İlk zamanlar adeta ağzımız kilitlenmişti. Dilsiz kalmıştık…” Ali İhsan Aksamaz-Turabi Saltık, Şükrü Güvenç, Eyüp Demir, Kemal Kök, Anadilde Eğitim ve Azınlık Hakları, Sorun Yayınları, 2005, İstanbul
35
‘read’ others’ bodies, a new system of signs and codes, just as they are exposed to
observation. (…) Individuals policed themselves, internalizing the surveiling eye.” 75
According to Begona, “the state, materializes not only through rules and
bureaucratic routines but also through a world of fantasy thoroughly narrativized and
imbued with affect, fear, and desire that make it, in fact a plausible reality.” 76 In the
Turkish Republic’s foundation history, the ‘teachers’ played a crucial role to make
people internalize the new national value system. And it was the teachers’ fantasy to turn
the people into a homogeneous citizens. The following lines are probably belong to a
teacher from a local magazine in Rize published in 1973:
There have been several languages spoken in Turkey for long time. One of them is spoken in some towns of Rize and Çoruh. For some reasons they call it Laz. We are not going to tell about the origins of this language, we don’t care at all anyway. Our aim is to explain how it is harmful and worthless.(…)We understand that Laz language is not important at all and it is a very fake language. And it will inevitably die. There is no written work so there is no need to learn this language. (…) So we should kill off this language as there is no source to survive.(…)If the education institutions and the families work together and teach the children Turkish in the first place the task would be achieved. So the next generations can be preserved from the harmful aspects of this language. (…)77
75 Diana Taylor, “The Theatre of Operations: Performing Nation-ness in the Public Sphere" Disapearing Acts: Spectacles of Gender and Nationalism in Argentina's 'Dirty War." Duke University Press, 1997, p. 107
76Begona Aretxaga , A Fictional Reality: Paramilitary Death Squads and the Construction of State Terror in Spain, Death Squad The Anthropology of State Terror, Jeffrey A. Sluka, Editor University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999, p, 52
77 “Türkiye’de öteden beri çeşitli diller yaşamaktadır. Bunlardan biri de Rize’nin bazı kazalarında hususiyetle Pazar, Ardeşen, Fındıklı ve bir de Çoruh’un bir iki ilçesinde konuşulanıdır. Bu dile nedense Lazca ismi atfedilir. Lazca’nın menşei bizi ilgilendirmediği gibi onun üzerine söz edecek de değiliz. Konumuzun ilişeceği husus bu dilin mahzurları ve değersizliğidir.(…) Bütün bunlardan anlıyoruz ki, Lazca hiçbir önemi ve değeri olmayan çok sahte bir dildir. Üstelik daima da dilin ucunda kalmaya mahkumdur. Lazca yazılmış hiçbir yapıt yoktur. Dolayısıyla bunu bilmenin hiçbir yararı görülmemiştir.
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In this quotation, one can easily observe the writer’s self position as a missionary
appropriating the local values to the nation while constituting him/herself as a
representative of the state. As Timothy Mitchell emphasizes, “the boundary between the
state and civil society is far from being fixed as it appears to be. On the contrary, this
boundary is elusive, uncertain and therefore unable to mark the position of real
exteriority for the state.”78 Benjamin also points out that the ‘police’ is a ghostly
embodiment of the modern state and ‘its power is formless, like its nowhere-tangible,
all-pervasive, ghostly presence in the life of the civilized states.” 79 If we accept that, the
‘police’ does not always have to be a paid employee of the state but also the missionary
civilians who mimic the state itself, the following citation might be relevant:
…In 1930’s, there was a job share between students like cleaning, first aid, etc. Among those, there was a duty of ‘fighting with Laz speakers’. 80 I was the chief of this duty81 in my fourth and fifth years in the primary school. We were doing it voluntarily because all the students and teachers were Laz originated and neither of them were able to speak Turkish properly. The duty of ‘fighting with Laz speakers’ did not make any sense for me because, even I was doing my part and warning the Laz speakers, when I got home, I was totally inefficient in
Öyleyse bu dilin kökünü kazımalıyız.(...) Zira bu dili ayakta tutacak hiçbir kaynak yok... Maarif ile ailelerin elbirliğiyle çalışmaları yeter. Her aile en azından öğretmen kadar kendi çocuğu üzerinde dursa ve ona doğuştan Türkçe’yi öğretse dava zamanla halledilmiş olur ve çocuklar da bu acayip dilin şerrinden kurtulmuş olur.’Kemençe Dergisi, V: 2, 1973 Cited in Koçiva, Selma, Lazona Laz Halk Gerçekliği Üzerine, Tüm Zamanlar Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 2000, p 182
78 Timothy Mitchell, “The limits of the State: Beyond the Statist Aproaches and Their Critics”, American Political Science Review, 85:1, 1991, p. 90-91 cited in Begona, 1999, p. 52
79 Walter Benjamin, “Critique of Violence” Reflections. Ed. Hannah Arendt. Schocken Books. New York, 1986, p. 243
80 Lazca ile mücadele kolu
81 Latif Özdemir mentions a similar experience on the Kurdish language. Özdemir, Latif 'Vatandaş Türkçe konuş', 2000, http://www.demanu.com.tr/rojateze/10.11.2000/kose_yazilari/Latifozdemir.html
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preventing my grandparents, neighbours from speaking Laz. Inevitably, I used to speak Laz with them. This was a horrific implementation that might have cause a child to be double-faced. 82
In short, either implemented by external or internal forces, the assimilation of the
Laz language deeply affected the lives of the Laz people. However, this assimilation did
not lead to a mass reaction and consequently into a reflectionist Laz identity (like it has
been the case for the Kurds) because these policies went in parallel with the state-led
economic policies mostly favoring the Laz.
The Urbanization Process and the Introversion of the Laz Identity
When Laz community moved to metropolises largely after the 1980s, they settled
down with their solidarity relations such as kins or fellow countryman and with a decent
capital to build or buy their houses in the city. They were not, at least, rootless
proletarians thanks to their tea gardens left in their hometowns. Even though there are
some exceptional cases, the general panorama has been in that way.
However, the migrants, who had divergent cultural values in their hometowns
suffered from an inevitable ‘cultural shock’. At the end, some of them went back to their
82 “…Otuzlu yıllarda okullarda Temizlik ve İntizam Kolu, Kızılay Kolu... gibi isimlerle çalışma kolları oluşturulurdu... Bunlar arasında “Lazca Konuşanlarla Mücadele Kolu” diye bir kol daha vardı. Ben dördüncü ve beşinci sınıfta iken bir müddet bu kolun başkanlığını yaptığımı hatırlıyorum... Bu işi... faydalı olduğuna inanarak yapardık. Çünkü talebeler de öğretmenler de Laz kökenli idiler ve Türkçeleri meramlarını ifade edemeyecek kadar bozuktu...Lazca Konuşanlarla Mücadele Kolu”ndaki faaliyetlerime bir anlam veremezdim. Çünkü okulda tamam; Lazca konuşanlara ihtarımı yapardım, ama eve gelince, köye çıkınca hiç Türkçe bilmeyen babaannem, dedem, komşuma hiç etkili olamıyordum. Hal böyle olunca, onlarla ben de Lazca konuşuyordum... Bir çocuğun ikiyüzlü gelişmesinde felâket etkili olacak bir uygulama.” Ali İhsan Aksamaz (Editor) http://www.kolkhoba.org/makaletrk6.htm
38
hometowns while others survived at the expense of the first generation to be excluded in
the ‘integration’ project.
People, who were alien to the ‘modern’ life in the city had tough experiences
where the modernity project assumed a quick integration of the villagers’ to the urban
life, leaving behind their ‘primitive’ cultural values in the village.
Like the gecekondu (shanty towns) problem itself, the state was inadequate in
terms of planning for the cultural needs of the populace.83 Thus, Laz migrants as well as
others had to find their own way to adapt their cultural background to the city and isolate
the distinct aspects of the culture to be expressed either at home or in hometown
associations.
The perception of Lazness was not only associated with the unpleasant past, but
also spatially to the ‘village/Laz region/Black Sea’ as an outcome of the modernization
project of the Turkish-state. Because “the modern cities are rather designed for the
nation-states where all the differences are melted in a pot.”84 Locality is only tolerated in
the form of nostalgia85 or when it is marketable in the private sphere.
In my interviews, particularly the Laz women were telling me, how the young
women in the village desired to marry with white-collar workers in order to have a
chance to get out of the village work. Even though the migrants suffered a lot in the city,
83 Martin Stokes, The Arabesk Debate: Music and Musicians in Modern Turkey, Oxford: Clarendon Press, New York; Oxford University Press. 1992, p.10
84 Sibel Demirtaş, Bülent Diken, İştar B. Gözüaydın, “Mekan ve Ötekiler”, Defter, V. 28, Metis Yayıncılık, 1996, p. 40
85 I refer to the term nostalgia in line with Rosaldo who takes it as “a dead, innocuous creature jettisoned the politics.” (Rosaldo, 1992) For example, the Laz accent can be tolerated unlike the Laz language spoken in the public sphere.
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city life was a dream for the ones left in the village. I also remember that it was the
fantasy in our childhood plays to move to Istanbul. In the end, Lazness was attached
with tough village life conditions to be left away and inevitably people either in the
village or in the city were eager to consume the boons of the modern life.
Apparently the migrant Laz women who had less contact with the ‘outside’ in the
village suffered more compared to the male members of the household when they came
to the city. That is to say, they were not familiar with the public sphere and formal
relations in the city in comparison to men who had always contacts with the city either
through trading or working due to their gender role as men. Because of the faint relation
with the city, or the town center in the hometown, women had a bad command of
Turkish, and therefore there had a great desire to learn it. During my interviews, I
listened to a lot of anecdotes about the mimicry of Turkish or the adoption of the
customs of the urban life and their consequent failure. Even though they were sad, those
stories were told with a sense of humour.
As I mentioned earlier, urban life assumes a kind of fusion and thus
abandonment of the local cultural values for a successful adaptation. The first to leave in
the village was of course the ‘language’ or at most it has to be kept in the houses. This
would cause the Laz language to be the language of privacy.
A twenty year old, second generation member of a migrant family, Eren
Dağıstanlı says that his parents were speaking Laz when they did not want their children
to understand them.86 Similarly, I felt like speaking Laz with my family or friends when
86 Interview with Eren Dağıstanlı, From the archive of BGST(Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu) in Boğaziçi University, 2009
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talking about something private in the public sphere giving the impression of carrying a
secret that only very few people know.
The problems connected to language have been the toughest experience for the
Laz migrants, these obstructed them from socializing with others in the city at first.
Once, I was asked to lecture in class. As soon as I opened my mouth, everybody laughed at me. I was terribly ashamed, so I promised myself that my children would not suffer from this (Laz) language. Indeed, my dream came true but in that case my children couldn’t learn their mother tongue. 87
There was a clear belief that the Laz language was extremely detrimental to the
Turkish accent and as a result meant failure at integration process.88 This general belief
led to a turning point for my generation, born after the 1980s, when the parents stopped
speaking Laz with their children. Thus, transmittance of the Laz language suffered a
dramatic rupture with the next generations. My generation was lucky to still have a
familiarity with the language which enabled us to understand but not able to speak
fluently but having a decisive accent revealing contextually.
The next generation (born in the 1990s) has even a more fading relation with the
Laz language, particularly the ones who were born in the city and learned Turkish from
TV channels and schools rather than their families. On the other hand, the language was
an enormous trouble for the former generations. The following example shows how the
language turns into a matter of survival and a primary concern in people’s lives.
87 Interviews, October, 2007, Istanbul.
88 Murat Çakır expresses his anger to such a mentality common in his family who considered speaking Laz as obscurantism who detained him speaking his mother tongue. Koçiva, Selma, Lazona Laz Halk Gerçekliği Üzerine, Tüm Zamanlar Yayıncılık, İstanbul, 2000, p 182
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I am Laz, and naturally I have a Laz accent of Turkish. This is similar to a Turk’s bad English speaking. However, people were laughing at me thanks to my accent in school, in the street….My efforts to speak Turkish without an accent became the main fact that conducted my and my families’ lives. Not to be aggrieved, we left Istanbul and moved back to Ardeşen. I failed at school and lost a whole year consequently. Was it because I was stupid, or lazy? No, it was just because I was speaking and thinking in another language.89
Kamil Aksoylu emphasizes that the humiliation he felt when ridiculed by the
others, was worst than any punishment and violence that he had to face.
When we come together with our friends, the subject eventually comes to the old days. When I visited one of my friend who is now a state officer, he brought out his childhood memories again which was a trauma for both of us. As we all referred to fındık (hazelnut) as ‘funduk’90 and even worse, ‘findik’ when try to correct it. Similarly we called Türkçe as ‘Turkçe’. Once, one of our teachers in the secondary school failed in his/her attempts to make him repeat the word during the whole lesson and our friend was relieved when we heard the bell. Similarly, I memorialized one of my friend in the army, who was saying first ‘boluk’ instead of bölük (troop) and the commander kept him saying ‘bööö’ sound for half an hour but he was still failing at pronouncing.”91
89 “Ben Laz’dım, ana dilim Lazcaydı ve doğaldır ki, Türkçeyi aksanlı konuşuyordum. Bu bir Türk’ün İngilizce’yi kötü konuşması gibi bir şeydi. Ama aksanım yüzünden bana gülüyorlardı. Sokakta, okulda böyleydi bu. Türkçeyi aksansız konuşma çabası, adeta hayatımı ve giderek ailemin hayatını yönlendiren başlıca neden olmuştu. Mağdur olmayalım diye İstanbul’u terk ederek Ardeşen’e dönmüştük örneğin. Sınıfta kalmış, bir yıl kaybetmiştim. Aptal olduğumdan mı? Yoksa tembelliğimden mi? İkisi de değil, ben başka bir dili konuşuyor ve düşünüyordum.” Özcan Sapan, “Lazcayı Yok Etmenin Dayanılmazlığı http://www.lazuri.com/tkvani_ncarepe/t_u_lazcayi_yoketmenin_dayanilmazligi.html
90 There are no ı, ü, ö, ü sounds in Laz, where one can sense their shortage in the Laz accent of Turkish.
91 “Bazen çocukluk arkadaşlarımla buluştuğumuzda söz dönüp dolaşıp eski günlere geliyor. Geçenlerde şu an devlet memuru olan bir arkadaşıma İstanbul’da misafir oldum. Söz dönüp dolaşıp bu konulara gelince de, ne onun ne de benim hayatımda unutamayacağımız o travma anısını yine anlattı. Hepimiz gibi arkadaşımız da doğal olarak fındık derken ya ‘funduk’ diyorduk ya da düzelteyim derken daha da berbat edip ‘findik’ diyordu. Türkçe diyemeyip ‘Turkçe’ diyordu. Ortaokul ikinci sınıfta Türkçe hocamızın tam bir ders boyunca tekrar ettirmesine rağmen bu arkadaşımıza ‘Türkçe’ dedirdemediğini ve zilin çalmasıyla nasıl bir ‘ohhh’ çektiğini yeniden yad ettik. Ben de askerde bir arkadaşımızın ‘birinci bölük’ derken ‘boluk’ dediğini, bölük komutanımızın defalarca tekrar ettirmesinde de ‘bölük’ diyemeyen bu
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At this point I will argue that, even though I claim that the Laz suffered from the
humiliation and exclusion due to their language, particularly in the public sphere, I don’t
think this treatment was interpreted as a consequence of being Laz but being
‘villager’(köylü) referring to a primitive and undesirable culture.92 Therefore this did not
solidify the Laz collective identity as a whole as in the case of the Kurds, apart from a
minority who lately dedicate themselves to the revitalization of the Laz language.
Beside language, I claim that the general attitude towards the whole ‘old’ way of
life was despised due to the same reasons by the majority of the Laz, apart from some
romantic intellectuals.
Denizhan Özer talked about how people in the village left their wood-stone
structured houses of traditional architecture 93 -which evidently made them sick due to
rheumatism- houses to be ruined, and enthusiastically built their houses made of
concrete. He said that they were making fun of him when he said he wanted to live in
their family wood-stone house. It was not a comprehensible manner for the people to
feel sympathy for the ‘old’.94
arkadaşımıza yine bölük komutanımız yarım saat bööö diye ses verdirdiğini ama arkadaşımızın booooo demekten vazgeçemedğini anlattım.” (Kamil Aksoylu, Laz Kültürü, Tarih, Dil, Gelenek ve Toplumsal Yapı, Phoenix Yayınevi, Ankara, 2009, p. 74)
92 Ahıska declares how the concept of ‘villager’ is rather contradictory “while ‘Anatolian People’ (Anadolu insanı) were represented as abject, to be eleminated but at the same time desired” in the public realm. Meltem Ahıska, Kimlik Kavramı Üstüne Fragmanlar, Defter, V. 27, Metis Yayıncılık, İstanbul. 1996, p. 25
93 Geleneksel dolmataş mimarisi
94 The presentation of the international Laz curator Denizhan Özer at 5. Yeşil Yayla, Kültür, Sanat ve Çevre Festivali, in Arhavi/ Artvin, August 2010
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I interpret the late commercialization of the Laz cuisine within the same context.
Laz cuisine was considered to be a local, undesirable (for the non-Laz) cuisine only
cooked in homes until a couple of years ago when the traditional cuisines became a
commercial and touristic trend.
When we moved to Istanbul, my mother cooked for her non-Laz neighbours
from Laz cuisine just when they asked her to do and praised their taste. Similarly, when
we asked her to cook Laz Böreği (a sweet pastry) in our restaurant, she decided not to
put any black pepper assuming that the non-Laz would find the black pepper strange
inside a desert. I interpret her attitude as an apologetic mentality about the Laz cuisine
assuming its taste as strange.
The Constitution of the Laz Identity in Antagonism to the Kurdish Identity
Stuart Hall says that “in common sense language, identification is constructed on
the back of a recognition of some common origin or shared characteristics with another
person or group, or with an ideal, and with the natural closure of solidarity and
allegiance established on this foundation. In contrast with the ‘naturalism’ of this
definition, the discursive approach sees identification as a construction, a process never
completed- always ‘in process’. It is not determined in the sense that it is always ‘won’
or ‘lost’, sustained or abandoned.”95 He says, “the total merging it suggests is, in fact, a
fantasy of incorporation. Identification is, then, a process of articulation, a suturing, an
95 Stuart Hall, “Who Needs ‘Identity’?” in Questions of Cultural Identity, edited by Stuart Hall and Paul du Gay, Sage Publications, London, 1998, p. 2
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over-determination not a consumption. There is always 'too much' or 'too little'—an
over-determination or a lack, but never a proper fit, a totality. Like all signifying
practices, it is subject to the 'play,' of différance. It obeys the logic of more-than-one.
And since as a process it operates across difference, it entails discursive work, the
binding and marking of symbolic boundaries, the production of 'frontier- effects'. It
requires what is left outside, its constitutive outside, to consolidate the process.” 96
The concept of identity deployed here is therefore not an essentialist, but a
strategic and positional one. That is to say, directly contrary to what appears to be its
settled semantic career, this concept of identity does not signal that stable core of the
self, unfolding from beginning to end through all the vicissitudes of history without
change, the bit of the self which remains always-already 'the same', identical to itself
across time. 97
In this respect, the facts that enable the Laz to differentiate themselves from the
‘others’ change contextually. For example, a Laz villager in the Laz region would
probably differentiate her/himself in a particular way referring to his/her Hemşinli or
Turk neighbours. Or maybe, not even as a matter of ethnicity but as a matter of everyday
practices, s/he would define her/himself in opposition to the people from a lower
mahalle (parish). However, I suggest that the constitution of the Laz identity constructed
with the Kurdish identity in the last two decades, especially in the urban context.
That is to say, Laz identity has been positioned as an opposite of the Kurdish
identity particularly after 1980s, when the Kurdish nationalism was on the rise. The Laz
96 ibid, p. 2-3
97 ibid, p. 3
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resembled the Kurds in terms of their village origin and bilingual character, but differed
in their historical relationship with the state.
One might think that this differentiation mechanism emerged once the physical
interaction occurred in the metropolis as a place of ‘confrontation of the foreigners’ 98;
however despite the physical affinity in the city, the cities are the places of social
interaction, the public sphere is not well designed to enable the ‘differences’ to confront
with each other.99 In the case of Laz, I would suggest that the differentiation is rather
ideological where the Laz themselves tend to secure their middle classness and
privileged position in the eye of the state.
While, the ‘other’ of the Kurdish identity is usually considered to be the Turks,
the ‘other’ of the Laz is not Turks, but Kurds. As the leading cultural/ethnic identity was
articulated and politicized by the Kurds, either as a reason or the consequence of this
announcement has highly marginalized them within the nation. Therefore the Laz were
quite hesitant to expose themselves in the public sphere, due to the fear of being
marginalized and loosing their privileged status. Consequently, condemnation of the
Kurds has been a convention in order to articulate one’s Lazness safely.
I find in my observations and interviews that the Kurds were portrayed as
‘miserable’, ‘separatist’, ‘hostile to the state’ and consequently ‘unreliable’ by the Laz.
Here is an anecdote which I believe explains the clash of the two stereotypes in everyday
practice. My mother once met with the wife of a friend of my father and they started
chatting instantly.
98 Sibel Demirtaş, Bülent Diken, İştar B. Gözüaydın, “Mekan ve Ötekiler”, Defter, V. 28, Metis Yayıncılık, 1996, p. 38
99 ibid, p. 40
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-Mehmet Bey, told me that you are from Black Sea.
-Yes, actually we are Laz.
-Laz? Estağfurullah!
-There is nothing wrong with being Laz, I think. We are bilingual, we
have a second language. But we are not like Kurds, not separatist, we don’t
kill anyone.
-We are Kurds.
When we come to the 2000s, the period of the proliferation of ethnic claims, the
tension between the Laz and the Kurdish identity increased as much as the latter
articulated their cultural rights legitimately. The more the Kurdish identity was
becoming legitimate, the more tension the Laz felt for emphasizing their Turkishness
and loyalty to the nation-state.
In one of the social media networks, myspace.com, someone who used ‘Lazca’
as a nickname, initially tells how the Laz are Turkish in origin and how they are loyal
while criticizing the separatists only because he does not want to be condemned as a
separatist himself. However, he goes on sharing the Laz songs and writing comments in
Laz language under the pictures from the ‘homeland’.100
Similarly, with regard to the news of some Laz who demanded broadcasting in
Laz language from the state, there were tough discussions among the readers on the
Internet whether they want the Laz TV broadcasting. A reader comment was as follows:
Nick Name: Alperen
Dear Friends,
100 http://tr.myspace.com/lazca
47
Rize is the cement of Turkey. We are a loyal region.What is the nonsense of
Lazca TV? Ok, the Laz language is already spoken but there can’t be a separate TV. Do
you consider yourself like the ‘East’. Lazness is only a joke. WE ARE SON OF THE
TURKS.101
Similarly, the Laz were expected to set an example for the whole nation in
contrast with the ‘unfavorable’ Kurds. Despite their similarity with Kurds in terms of
bilingualism and having a district culture, the Laz were praised for not being a
‘demanding’ ethnic group like Kurds. The deputy from the Nationalist Action Party
(MHP), Münir Kutluata once told to the Peace and Democracy Party Deputies (BDP)
referring to the “Laz who speak Laz but still demand neither education in Laz nor self
autonomy”.102 It paradoxically has turned into a joke about the Laz and Kurds.
When a Kurd and a Laz were sentenced to death penalty they were
asked for their last wish. Then the Kurd asked to see his mother for the last
time. When it came to the Laz, he said ‘I wish the Kurd to not see his
mother.’ 103
In short, it is obvious that unless the cultural policies are revised in line with
more freedom and fairness, there will be some sort of tension in society like the one
between the Laz and the Kurdish.
101 “Alperen/ arkadaşlar rize türkiyenin çimentosu vatanına milletine başlı bir yöreyiz biz nedir lazca bir tv tamam lazca zaten bilen konuşuyor ama ayrıca tv olmaz siz kendinizi doğu ile birmi tutuyorsunuz lazlık sadece bir latife BİZ TÜRK OĞLU TÜRKÜZ.” 24.02.2009 http://www.haber53.com/haber_detay.php?haber_id=28696 102 3 November .2010 http://www.turkhaber.eu/Guncel/Lazlar-Kurtler-Gibi-Degil-797.htm
103 “Bir Lazla bir Kürt birlikte idam sehpasına çıkarılır. Cellat, iki kurbanından önce Kürt'e son arzusunu sunar. Kürt, 'Anamı görmek isterim' der. Cellat, 'Kabul' deyip Laz'a döner; 'Senin son arzun nedir?' Laz cevaplar; 'Kürt, anasını görmesin.'Türker, Yıldırım, ‘Kürt anasını görmesin’” Radikal Gazetesi, 06.04.2003, http://www.radikal.com.tr/ek_haber.php?ek=r2&haberno=2124
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CHAPTER III:
CHALLENGING THE EXISTING REPRESENTATIONS OF LAZ FOR
INTRODUCING A NEW LAZ IDENTITY
In this chapter, I will reconsider the works of the Laz intellectuals as efforts to
open a space for a new representation of their cultural identity by challenging the
popular stereotypes. I believe that these works aimed at reconstructing the temporality
and space of the Laz identity that was shaped by the processes that I elaborated in the
first chapter.
The Replacement of Experience by Representation
Since the foundation of the republic in Turkey, as the cultural differences were
reduced to regional differences; the language, music, dance, etc. were expected and
represented to be in line with “Turkishness” according to cultural policies. For example,
the Kurds were assumed to be speaking a South-Eastern Turkish accent, and similarly
the Laz, the north-Eastern Turkish accent. Even when it was called the “Laz
language”(Lazca) it was still supposed to be a ‘distorted’ accent of Turkish.
The widespread “Laz stereotype” has identified with the Black Sea region via
popular cultural products and the media. This stereotype is still represented as macho,
extremely naive or cunning, speaking a “funny” Turkish accent, dancing “horon” with
kemençe improperly. Despite the apparent cultural differences, Lazness is defined within
Turkishness and as a regional version of it.
When I was giving a short lecture about my research project to the Folklore Club
of Boğaziçi University, I repeated my argument about the perception of the Laz as a
49
version of Turkishness, a Laz student told me a recent anecdote that confirms my
argument. She was in a state office in Ardeşen and supposed to fill in a form. When it
came to the question of nationality, she was unwilling to write ‘Turkish’, considering
herself Laz.
-Why are you not writing ‘Turkish’?
- I am not Turkish!
- Are you Kurdish?
- No, I am Laz.
- Laz is counted as Turkish, you go ahead and write ‘Turkish!’
It would not be wrong to say that the Laz stereotype is commonly found to be a
sympathetic one within the nation, particularly by the Turks, and therefore has positive
connotations at first glance. Especially within the popular discourse, “the Turkishness of
the Laz” has not been considered to be a controversial and debatable claim at all, until
the last decade.
We can trace the ‘Laz’ stereotype back to the beginning of the nineteenth century
in the Karagöz-Hacivat show.104 As the characters of the Karagöz-Hacivat show
consisted of the superficial representations of the Empire’s people, the Laz represented
the Black Sea community. Metin And describes the Laz character as such: “Laz, who
comes from the Black Sea coast, is either a boatman, woolbeater or tin smith. He has a
strong Black Sea coast accent. He is very talkative and also speaks quickly. He takes
approximately fifteen minutes just to say 'hello' and is very jittery. As he is usually so
busy talking to himself, he cannot listen to other people or follow what they say and has
104 S. Sokullu , Türk Tiyatrosunda Komedyanın Evrimi, Kültür Bakanlığı, Ankara, 1997
50
a habit of becoming angry in a very short time. Karagöz often has to forcibly close Laz's
mouth in order to get a word in himself.”105 The popular cultural products of plays and
films continue the tradition, and their plots are still likely to include a man from the
Black Sea coast as a minor figure. In these products, the Laz people are generally
portrayed as superficial ‘funny’ characters representing their regional, folkloric motifs
(accent, music, dance, etc.).
It is possible to find countless examples of the common Laz stereotype amongst
the popular cultural products which continue the above mentioned tradition of Turkish
theatre, cinema, TV and literature. However I would like to mention only a few among
these.
For example, the ‘Vişne Bahçesu’ is said to be the Laz version of the Chekhov’s
‘Cherry Garden’ staged by Ferhan Şensoy in 1990s. Similarly the Laz Kapital106, was
supposed to be a humorous version of Das Kapital by Karl Marx written in ‘Laz’ accent.
As “stereotyping reduces people to a few, simple, essential characteristics, which are
represented as fixed by nature,”107 the common point of those works is that the Laz
character portrayed extremely superficially in terms of social background and reduced to
a few folkloric elements like accent, music, dance etc. This character functions basically
as a humorous spice added to the work.
105 Metin And, Karagöz Turkish Shadow Theatre, Dost Yayınları, Istanbul, 1975, p. 67-75 106 Yılmaz Okumuş, Laz Kapital, Epsilon Yayınevi, 2006
107 Stuart Hall, The Spectacle of the Other, Representation Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices, Ed. Stuart Hall, The Open University, Sage Publications, 1997, p. 257
51
The name ‘Laz’108 is commonly used as a joke to refer to awkward stupidness
just as it is used for the Britons, Scots, etc. as a part of a humorous genre that circulates
within almost all societies. The Laz jokes (Laz Fıkraları) are quite popular either told
orally or written—and there are many Laz joke books.
As an extension of this stereotype, the ‘irrationality’ of the Laz is frequently
displayed in media as if irrationality is actually the general, ‘natural’ characteristic of
these people.109 This obviously strengthens the stereotype and treats it as ‘real’.
Meeker calls attention to the resemblance of the Pontic Greeks’ stereotype in
Greece. “The Pontic Greeks are called Laz (Lazoi) by other Greeks, just as Black Sea
Turks are called Laz by other Turks, and the term carries the same mildly derogatory
meaning in Greek that it carries in Turkish. Like the Black Sea Turks, the Pontic Greeks
are famous for what have been identified as Caucasian characteristics-blood feuds,
interest in and dependence on weapons, sensitivity to questions of honor, and a more
careful separation of men and women in public life. Other Greeks regard them as being
more primitive, unsophisticated and their accent110 is ridiculed, just as the accent of the
Black Sea Turks is ridiculed by other Turks.”111
108 Once, in restaurant, our Laz delivery person couldn’t find the delivery address. When he came back to the restaurant, the costumer called and told off ‘Are you Laz!’ When he received the confirmation, he said ‘ Estağfurullah!’
109 Nurettin İğci (Eds.) Medyatik Temel Karadeniz’den Fıkra Ötesi Gerçekler, Era Yayıncılık , İstanbul, 2002
110 For the narrative of the discrimination that the Pontic Greek originated migrants were subjected to particularly related with the ‘accent’ see: Arzu Öztürkmen, “Remembering Conflicts in a Black Sea Town: A Multi-sited Ethnography of Memory”, New Perspectives on Turkey, V. 34, Spring 2006, p. 109
111 Michael E. Meeker, The Black Sea Turks: Some Aspects of Their Ethnic and Cultural Background, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 2, No. 4,October, Cambridge University Press, 1971, p. 332-333
52
One of the researchers on the Laz culture, Ildiko Beller Hann says that “the term
‘Laz’ also camouflages the multicultural structure of the Black Sea region. Many people,
particularly in the texts, are aware of this stereotype: energetic, brave, savage, cruel to
the women but care about children’s education. This common stereotype leaves very
little space (in terms of representation) for the ones in the east (Laz, Hemşin,
Georgian.)”112
What I would like to emphasize here is the ways that these stereotypes are
consumed by the Laz themselves. While the political correctness is taken for granted at
the national level, despite the frustration about their mis-representations, the Laz do not
actually find these that offensive as far as I could observe. Perhaps, despite the negative
aspects, it is tolerated and internalized because in the total it has positive connotations
associated with being practical, brave and patriotic which place the Laz on the ‘safe’
side of the nation.
Stuart Hall’s argument about stereotypes shows how a stereotype can be
simultaneously both negative and positive: “People who are in any way significantly
different from the majority- ‘them’ rather than ‘us’ –are frequently exposed to binary
form of representation. They seem to be represented sharply opposed; polarized, binary
extremes-good/bad, civilized/primitive, ugly/excessively attractive, repelling-because-
different/compelling-because-strange-and-exotic. And they are often required to be both
things at the same time!”113
112 Ildiko Beller Hann, Doğu Karadeniz’de Efsane Tarih ve Kültür, Trans. Ali İhsan Aksamaz , Çivi Yazıları Yayınevi , İstanbul, 1999, p 23
113 Stuart Hall, The Spectacle of the Other, Representation Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices, Ed. Stuart Hall, The Open University, Sage Publications, 1997, p. 229
53
Hall also says that “stereotypes get hold of the few ‘simple, vivid, memorable,
easily grasped and widely recognized’ characteristics about a person, reduce everything
about the person to those traits, exaggerate and simplify them, and fix them without
change or development eternity. So the first point is- stereotyping reduces, essentializes,
naturalizes and fixes ‘difference’”. 114
From this respect, I would suggest that, the Laz stereotype reduces the Laz to a
couple of exaggerated characteristics and fixing them so that the opportunity for Laz to
express and represent themselves is almost closed off. As the stereotype objectifies the
Laz, it does not leave them any chance to open up any space to their ‘experience’.
Thus, despite the immense productions referring to ‘Laz’, there have been only a
few works in the popular culture, only in the 2000s that the Laz community was able to
identify with themselves. For example it was in 2003 that a Laz song appeared on the
TV 115 and surprisingly in 2010 a dialogue in Laz took place on a movie screen.116
Under these conditions, the Laz consciously or unconsciously camouflaged their
Lazness in order to be taken seriously and to be unmarked especially when migrating to
the metropolises. That is to say, in order to be an acceptable subject in everyday life,
Lazness has to be abandoned. I would like to tell two particular anecdotes that I hope
expresses this attitude.
Once me, my cousin and her friends were coming back from the concert of
Empula. As we were all Laz and enjoyed the music and horon during the concert we
114 Stuart Hall, 1997, p. 258
115 Gülbeyaz, Kanal D, 2002
116 Cem Yılmaz was playing the Laz, speaking Laz, however still a ‘crazy’ character in ‘Av Mevsimi’ by Yavuz Turgul.
54
were speaking with our Laz accent unconsciously without feeling any stress of adjusting
it to the ‘Istanbul Turkish accent’. When we started speaking about politics, my cousin’s
friend’s accent unconsciously changed to ‘Istanbul Turkish’.
In the second case, it was the moment I caught myself in a very similar position.
I was then talking to a childhood friend on the phone, again in a similar relaxed mood,
when I started talking about the subject that I was working on a research project, she
found the change in my ‘adjusted’ accent strange.
Those moments helped me realize that Turkish is the language of the formal life,
while the Laz (or its extension as the accent) language is the language of the
informal/intimate, etc. This division inevitably enables the Laz (and probably other
minority groups) to have not only two languages, but also two accents.
I realized that I had a marked accent when my friends told me that my accent
changes instantly as soon as I get home or meet with my family and Laz friends. In
addition to that, I frequently receive the comment of ‘Have you ever lived abroad?’ in a
formal conversation (especially work interviews). Apparently, my accent leaks from my
unconscious efforts to hide it. And as I give the impression of a middle class, educated,
‘modern’ woman, people cannot recognize my Laz accent which is more likely to be
attached to villagers, etc. I can tell that this is the fate of all ethnic languages spoken in
Turkey as I have heard similar incidents from my Kurdish friends.
The Laz language was so much marked with ‘apolitical’ and ‘light’ connotations,
it is not taken seriously by the state even if the content is highly antagonistic. The band
Zuğaşi Berepe was suffering and at the same time enjoying this kind of perception of the
Laz language:
55
In the first album of Zuğaşi Berepe, “Va Mişkunan”, we had lyrics like ‘stand up, come together, go and occupy the factories for the sake of freedom, love and revolution’. Actually, I was expecting a response from the ‘rival team’ but it didn’t happen. I guess they listened to our lyrics like a Laz joke”117
Obviously not just because of this reason but also the historical positions of the
Laz may also contribute to this sort of indifference by the state.
Stereotyping is what Foucault called a ‘power/knowledge’ sort of game. It
classifies people according to a norm and constructs the excluded as ‘other’. The
establishment of normalcy through social norms and stereotypes is one aspect of the
habit of ruling groups to attempt to fashion the whole of society according to their own
world view, value system, sensibility and ideology. 118
Power has to be understood here, not only in terms of economic exploitation and
physical coercion, but also in broader cultural or symbolic terms, including the power to
represent someone or something in a certain way-within a certain ‘regime of
representation’. It includes the exercise of symbolic power through representational
practices. Stereotyping is a key element in this exercise of symbolic violence.119
Therefore we can interpret the existence of the stereotypes as a threat from the
state to the citizens to adjust themselves according to the acceptable citizens’ norms;
otherwise the marking and exclusion would be inevitable.
117 “Zuğaşi Berepe’nin ilk albümü Vamişkunan’da şöyle şarkı sözlerimiz vardı: ‘Ayağa kalkın, yan yana gelin, gidin fabrikaları işgal edin, özgürlük, aşk ve devrim için.” Doğrusu bu sözlere ‘rakip takım’dan tepki bekliyordum. Olmadı. Bizim şarkı sözlerini Laz fıkrası gibi dinlediler galiba.” Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, “N3aşa Exti” Roll, V. 99, July, 2005
118 Stuart Hall, The Spectacle of the Other, Representation Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices, Ed. Stuart Hall, The Open University, Sage Publications, 1997, p. 259
119 Stuart Hall, 1997, p. 259
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The Laz Cultural Movement: Reconstructing the Temporal and Spatial
Dimensions of the Laz Identity
When we come to the end of the twentieth century we see that the effects of
globalization which simplify the circulation of information about the history, origins,
and cultures as well as the capital and labour predominantly alter the conventional
nationalist discourse and promote instead, multiculturalism in Turkey, as in many other
contexts around the world. As a consequence of the decline in the legitimacy of
monolithic cultural policies of the nation states, the persistence of ethnic minorities as
indicative of backwardness and anti-modernism has gradually lost considerable ground.
Ferguson and Gupta claim that, owing to globalization, the conventional
governmental form changed and consequently “new forms of transnational connection
are increasingly enabling “local” actors to challenge the state’s well-established claims
to encompassment and vertical superiority in unexpected ways (…)”.120
Furthermore, it can even be argued that some are now glorifying ethnic-pluralism
as an indicator of modernity and democracy. Starting from 1990s, several controversial
metaphors arose which are either glorifying or criticizing the multicultural structure of
Turkey such as mosaics, ebru, marble (metaphor of the Nationalist Movement Party),
etc. Those metaphors can be interpreted as attempts to re-define the nation with a new
concept: spontaneously recognizing the multicultural structure while perpetuating the
Turkishness through new means. However, as a result of the Kurdish Political
120 James Ferguson; Akhil Gupta, Spatializing States: Toward an Ethnography of Neoliberal Governmentality, Anthropologies of Modernity, Foucault, Governmentality, and Life Politics, Edited by: Jonathan Xavier Inda, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005, p.114
57
Movement revitalizing in 1980s, having social, cultural and economic roots historically,
the 1990s were still tense for discussing the notion of ‘multiculturalism’.
When we come to the 2000s, the notion of multiculturalism gets rather reified
with the relatively liberal policies of the Justice and Development Party (AKP). 121
Responding to the changing demographics, economic geography as well as the peoples’
democratic aspirations, the party has positioned itself as pro-market and pro-
European.122 The reformist AKP governments initiated several courageous openings
(dubbed “democratic opening” by the government) to mend relations with and address
the current and historical problems of groups such as the Alevis, Armenians, the Roman
community and Kurds. 123 Despite the possibility of forging a more pluralistic
democracy by these reformist elites124, the changes in the hegemonic discourse had not
yet been supported by persistent changes in the legal framework.
I believe that the AKP elites’ understanding of ‘modernity’ and ‘tradition’ played
an important role in this dramatic shift towards the notion of multiculturalism in a short
period of time. Rabasa and Larrabee say that, “while the AKP has Islamic roots, it enjoys
broad based political support that transcends religious, class, and regional differences.
Its widespread social networks and efficient party machine, with close ties to local
constituencies, have enabled it to gain strong support among the poor and the
marginalized—many of whom are pious and socially conservative—who make up a
121 Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi
122 Soli Ozel, “Turkey's Quest to Modernise Remains on Track” Financial Times, 25 July 2007
123 Murat Somer, “Does It Take Democrats to Democratize? Lessons From Islamic and Secular Elite Values in Turkey”, Comparative Political Studies, 2011 V. 44: 511, p. 533-534
124 ibid, p.514
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growing portion of Turkey’s urban population. At the same time, its liberal, free-market
economic policies attract the provincial entrepreneurial classes in Anatolia—the so-
called “Anatolian tigers”—which are socially conservative but integrated into the global
economy.” 125
In her early article in 1997, Göle says that ‘the very project of modernization,
based on external references, alien to local customs and traditions, has perverted the
relationship between the secular elites and the people. Islamism, both in its ideological
formulations and sociological practices, has created new hybridizations between
tradition and modernity, religion and secularism, community and religion. Islamization,
therefore, can be seen as a counter-attack against the principles of the Kemalist project
of modernization and the vested interests of the Westernized elites. 126 Like the previous
elites, their social status is defined not only by economic power, but by cultural capital.
The way the türban (headscarf) is represented as a part of the modern life instead
of its former ‘traditional’ context is a good example of this change. 127 What I would like
to emphasize here is that, the power of AKP enabled certain people to feel comfortable
with their traditional values and adapt those values to the modern life. This inevitably
disturbed the Republican elites who were represented as the ‘conveyers’ of the
modernity and considered as the ‘good citizens’ (makbul vatandaşlar) so far. In short,
my purpose is to demonstrate that this conceptual change enabled people to express their
125 Angel Rabasa and F. Stephen Larrabee, The Rise of Political Islam in Turkey, National Defense Research Institute, RAND Corporation, 2008, p. 97
126 Nilüfer Göle, Secularism and Islamism in Turkey: The Making of Elites and Counter-Elites, Middle East Journal, Vol. 51, No. 1, Winter, 1997 pp. 46-58
127 Baris Kiliçbay and Mutlu Binark, “Consumer Culture, Islam and the Politics of Lifestyle : Fashion Contemporary Turkey, European Journal of Communication, V. 17, 2002, p. 495
59
ethnic, cultural origins without being apologetic compared with earlier times. However,
this is a relative freedom compared with the past and some ethnic and religious groups
such as the Kurds and Alevis are still having significant problems of expression
compared to the others.
Despite the recent challenges, the hierarchical scaling between the ‘traditional’
and the ‘modern’ is still considerably maintained by the people of Turkey, the following
example might be interesting: On the TV show ‘Yemekteyiz’128 shot in Rize, one of the
local contestants started her preparation from her village collecting the ingredients while
orientalizing the village life wearing local costume and cooking particularly from local
cuisine and stressing her strong accent. Then when the preparations finished and it was
time to serve, she changed her costume to a ‘modern style’ and tracked her accent
instantly to a ‘decent’ mode. On top of that she proudly expressed that “I demonstrated
how a Black Sea girl could be ‘modern’ appropriately….modernism is not in my
appearance but in my heart, I am natural.”129
Cultural revitalization movements among various ethnic groups took place
everywhere in the world in the last hundred years or so have led to self-conscious efforts
to preserve their cultural heritage. However, we should take into consideration that every
movement has its own historical context. In the next step, I will focus on the process of
the Laz Cultural Movement. However, since it should not be considered as a
homogeneous movement I will attempt to explore the conflicts and controversial notions
within it. The definition of ‘Laz Cultural Movement’ is not mine, but employed by those
128 It is contest where contestants perform their cooking skills and represent their local cuisine.
129 “Karadeniz kızının çok güzel modern olabileceğini gösterdim. (…) Modernlik benim için beynimde, görünümümde değil. Ben doğalım.” Yemekteyiz, 18 May 2009, Show TV
60
Laz intellectuals who practically contributed, more or less, to the revitalization of the
Laz culture.
Stuart Hall says, “identity is such a concept-operating ‘under erasure’ in the
interval between reversal and emergence; an idea which cannot be thought in the old
way, but without which certain key questions cannot be thought at all”. 130 I can certainly
say that the Laz Cultural Movement emerged in such conditions when the Laz language
as well as other cultural characteristics are said to be ‘in dissolution’ due to several
reasons I attempted to explain above.
Since 1990s, the above mentioned “Laz stereotype” has been increasingly
contested131 and challenged through some performances in music, dance, theatre,
publications and the Internet in particular. The main motivation has been to expose
Lazness in the public sphere where more or less almost all Laz experienced Lazness
through this ‘invisibility’ and incommunicability due to the existence of the Laz
stereotype. During the formal or informal interviews I conducted with the Laz people
since 2002, 132 I met many people who complained about the difficulty of expressing
even the existence of the Laz language.
This invisibility should not be considered as having been completely detrimental
for the Laz. On the contrary, it has sometimes enabled them to be as free as an invisible
130 Stuart Hall, “Who Needs ‘Identity’?” in Questions of Cultural Identity, eds. Stuart Hall, Paul du Gay, Sage Publications: London, 1998, p.2 Cited in Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004, p.19
131 Selma Koçiva, “Laz Fıkralarıyla Üstümüze Gelenler”, Özgür Politika, 11 October 1998
132 My graduation research project for the sociology department was about “Reading the Urbanization Experiences of the Laz through the ‘Laz’ jokes”. (Nilüfer Taşkın, “Laz Fıkraları ve Lazların Kentleşme Süreci”, Undergraduate Thesis, Sociology Department, University of Mimar Sinan, İstanbul, 2003)
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man is free of charge of his faults. For example, I believe that this invisibility protected
them from being subjected to violence from either the society or the state.
Despite the existence of diverse and even rival discourses, the common
motivation of these struggles was to take out Lazness out of the ‘Laz’ stereotype, giving
back the honour of the Laz culture to itself, exposing the Laz identity in the public
sphere, and unmarking or re-marking the Laz identity. To put it other words, whatever
they did, those intellectuals intended to bring the Laz culture from the past to the present
time, and bring it to the center of the city from the village. As the representations of
‘cultures’ have conventionally been detached from their historicality and rather
represented as ‘dead’ in Turkey, these attempts aimed at presenting and enabling the Laz
identity as a ‘living’ entity without being marked. It would be useful to mention Simon
Frith here as he says: “an identity is always already an ideal, what we would like to be,
not what we are.”133
I find significant to elaborate on the concept of ‘identity’ here. Meltem Ahıska,
defines a difference between ‘self’ and ‘identity’ and refers to the concept of ‘identity’
as a representation of the ‘self’134 which is a ‘social construction’ that is shaped in the
need.135 Secondly, she says when constructing the identity, the individual rather ignores
the contradictory or conflicting aspects of the self and pretends as if it is
133 Simon Frith, “Music and Identity”, in Questions of Cultural Identity, edited by Stuart Hall and Paul du Gay, Sage Publications, London, 1998, p.123
134 Meltem Ahıska, Kimlik Kavramı Üstüne Fragmanlar, Defter, V. 27, Metis Yayıncılık, İstanbul. 1996, p. 16
135 ibid, p. 30
62
homogeneous.136 Thus, it would not be wrong if we say that the Laz intellectuals intend
to reconstruct the ‘Laz identity’ by freeing it from its conventional context which has
objectified them so far. And in order to do so, they ignore the contradicting aspects of
their selves and rather pretend as if Lazness is a monolithic essence.
Stokes suggests that “subcultures borrow from the dominant culture, inflecting
and inverting its signs to create a bricolage in which signs of the dominant culture are
‘there’ and just recognizable as such, but constituting a quite different, subversive
whole.” 137 The Laz intellectuals were to do so indeed, constructing particularly the
notions of ‘history’, ‘culture’, ‘language’, etc. towards the Turkish nation-states’ but in
a parallel manner. Therefore, I will attempt to analyze the actors, the institutions and the
discourses around the Movement with those concepts.
At this point, I would like to note that I assume a sort of differentiation between
the actors of the Movement and the intended consumers of their productions as ‘Laz
people’. This is because I see a difference in the construction of Laz identity for both
sides. First of all, while the intellectuals define Lazness with the concept of ‘difference’,
the Laz people do it with ‘similarity’ with the Turkish nation. Secondly, the intellectuals
consider the Laz as a minority138 who have suffered from assimilation policies of the
nation state(s)139 while the latter deny any implication of oppression or pacification.
136 ibid, p. 15; p. 22
137 Martin Stokes, “Introduction”, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p.19
138 The term "minority" here refers to a socially subordinate ethnic group.
139 Not only the Turkish state but also there are references of Soviet Russia because of the Laz population in Georgia.
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However, the distance between the two groups has been closing since the
beginning of 1990s to eventually meet at the same point: enjoying music and dance in
the public sphere in the 2000s as I will elaborate in the third chapter.
History: Glorifying the Golden Age of Colchis
Probably, one of the common points of all the revitalization movements is
reconstructing ‘their history’ as a response to the misrepresentations of the official
nationalist history. As it was the case for the Laz intellectuals, the historical roots of the
Laz were ‘discovered’ or ‘invented’. I should note that, by using the terms of ‘discovery’
or ‘invention’, I do not intend to say that these historical references are insubstantial,
while it is not the concern of this thesis. Rather, I am interested to analyze how this
concept is functionalized to reconstruct the Laz identity. In this context, I accept the
notion of ‘history’ as an ideological apparatus serving to the various power designs
which makes it possible for the intellectuals to call ‘history’ to the service of
construction of the new Laz identity.
In 1992, a book titled as “History of Lazis”140 was published which was quite
popular among the Laz and sparked off some hot debates about the historical roots of
Laz which were said to migrate from the Central Asia as well as other ethnic groups of
Anatolia according to the official history thesis. 141 Referring to the Colchis civilization
as the roots of the Laz was signifying the Caucasian origin instead of Central Asia. This
140Muhammed Vanilişi and Ali Tandiliva, Lazların Tarihi, İstanbul: Ant Yayınları, 1992 141 M. Fahrettin Kırzıoğlu, .”Lazlar/Çanarlar”, Türk Tarih Kongresi VII, 1.Volume, 1972, p. 420-45
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thesis persuaded some Laz who were already enthusiastic about differentiating
themselves from Turks. However, the book’s claim that Laz were from the Georgian
origin had lost its persuasiveness among the Laz intellectuals lately.
The frequent reference to Colchis was meant to say to the Laz people that ‘you
are not rootless. On the contrary, you were, once upon a time, part of a civilization that
ruled a wide geography’. The name Colchis was turned to be a symbol, for example,
giving name to a couple of firms.142
The history of the Laz’ was written many times from more or less a similar
perspective since 1992 by different writers.143 When we talk about history, we should
mention Ogni here, a highly influential magazine launched in 1993.144 The magazine
was mostly in Turkish and there was the introduction of the Laz alphabet in Latin
characters and some sample essays mainly about Laz culture.
Moreover, the notion of ‘history’ was extremely important for the contributors of
Ogni. They were basically “enlightening” the people about “their history”, not simple
history but History of the Golden Age of Laz when they were presumably a dominant
power in the Eastern Black Sea and Caucasia during the Colheti civilization. Not only
the ancient times, but through a careful reading of Ogni, one was able to learn about the
recent history of Laz institutions like Laz Tekamül-ü Milli Cemiyeti. 145
142 Colchis Music Production Company by Birol Topaloğu and Colchis İletişim by Funda Özyurt.
143 Ali İhsan Aksamaz, 1997, 2000; Ildiko Beller Hann, 1999; Meeker, 1971; Ascherson, 2001; M . Recai Özgün, 1996
144 Ogni means listen, understand in Laz. Ogni, Sifteri Yayıncılılık, 1992, Istanbul.
145 Tank Zafer Tunaya, ‘Laz Tekamül-ü Milli Cemiyeti’, Ogni, V.1, 1993
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Michael-Rolph Trouilot argues that “the production of historical narratives
involves the uneven contribution of competing groups and individuals who have uneven
access to the means for such production.”146 And continues, “not only the socio-
historical processes themselves are involved with struggles, but the production of
knowledge is also an arena of constant struggle.” 147
In contrast with the intellectuals, the Laz people were not that concerned with
where they came from, instead, the sense of ‘us’ was apparently enough for them.148
Moreover, in the public memory, the matter of history was more personal and
complicated then what the ‘glorious ancient history’ discourse would say. People were
able to trace their ancestors’ genealogy only a few generations earlier. Moreover, they
were more likely to identify themselves with the Black Sea rather than the Caucasus.
Besides, majority of the Laz people consider themselves as part of Turkish community
by inventing the paradoxical term ‘Laz Turks’ even when they recognize a cultural
differentiation to a certain extent.
Ogni brought about a considerable synergy to those educated, middle class Laz,
mostly men who were conscious about reconstructing the ‘Laz identity’. Not only
among Laz, but there was also an interaction with other ethnic groups in that respect,
particularly the Caucasians of Turkey. Even though the Movement was influenced
significantly from the Kurdish Movement, the intellectuals “have been careful not to
146 Michael-Rolph Trouillot, “Preface”, Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History, Beacon Pres, 1995, p. Xix. Cited in Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004,p. 127
147 ibid, p.127
148 Neal Ascherson, Karadeniz, İş Bankası Yayınları, 2001, Istanbul, p. 254
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make any claims that might be interpreted as claims for political separatism, but have
urged only that action be taken to defend Lazuri (Laz language) and Laz culture more
generally”.149 Moreover, the affiliation with the Kurds might have marginalized the
Movement implying ‘separatist intentions’.
Ogni was taken to the court by the claim of having separatist intentions anyway.
While the case terrorized most of the Laz readers, it drew the attention of some leftist
groups. Despite the acquittal, the magazine had to be closed after the sixth edition due to
various reasons.
In the following years some other books and magazines were published such as
Mjora150 and Skani Nena151 by the same circles. Even though the writings in the
following publications were employing similar concepts, they were not as influential as
Ogni. As language was one of the prominent concerns of the contributors’ of Ogni, one
would also find some Laz cultural activists from recent history who were consequently
punished by the Ottoman and Soviet Russian forces. 152
In short, for the Laz intellectuals, ‘their glorious history’ is appropriated to make
it possible for the Laz people to identify with their own ethnic origins. This can also be
interpreted as a typical mechanism employed by the nationalism.
149 Chris Hann and Ildiko Beller Hann “Markets, Morality and Modernty in North-East Turkey” in Border Identities: Nation and State at International Frontiers, Cambridge University Press, Thomas M. Wilson, Hastings Donnan (Eds.), 1998, p. 257
150 Mjora, Çiviyazıları, İstanbul, 2000
151 The publication of the Laz Culture Association, in İstanbul, 2009
152 Mehmedali Barış Beşli, “Tarihe Karşı Kısa Bir Tarih”, Mjora, 2 , Çivi Yazıları, 2000, p.16
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The ‘Loss’ of the Language
When we look at the related productions as a whole, we can easily grasp the
notion of ‘loss of the Laz language’. The language has been considered as being almost
the most important signifier of the Laz. If to make the Laz language ‘visible’ in the
public sphere was the first task, to remove the pejorative connotations around it was the
second. If they manage to transform the self-perception of the Laz people, they believed,
they could incite the people to speak and revitalize their language.
The band Zuğaşi Berepe was one of the significant actors who managed to
introduce the Laz language to a group of educated youth living in the urban areas in
1993. By composing and singing in Laz language –which was previously regarded as
‘the villagers’ language in a ‘modern’ musical genre, ‘rock’, was a successful mission of
reconstructing the temporal and spatial aspects of the Laz identity. Kazım Koyuncu’s
self-account was also in this direction:
I think, the way Zuğaşi Berepe used the Laz language has been the most important action in order to revitalize the language. Because the Laz language had to urbanize itself anyway.153
However, the change in the album covers of Zuğaşi Berepe signifies a sort of
confusion in this respect. For example I interpret the first album’s cover, a picture of an
old woman, as a ‘conveyer of the Laz language’ rather pessimistic and still embedding
the Laz identity in the past. However the second album cover was rather ‘modern’ in
153 “Zuğaşi Berepe’nin Lazcayı kullanma biçimi bence Lazca’ya yapılan ve Lazca’nın yaşatılması doğrultusunda yapılan en önemli eylem olduğunu düşünüyorum. Çünkü Lazca’nın bir şekilde kentleşmesi gerekiyordu.” Interview with Kazım Koyuncu on Umut Radyo in Pazar (Rize). 3 February 2004 (Date uncertain)
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terms of its graphic design which orients to the present and is more optimistic about the
‘future’.
Through their performances, many people found out that such a language as Laz
existed. Even though they arranged some traditional Laz songs, most of their repertoire
consisted of their own compositions about love, revolution and Lazness itself. Not only
the music but also the band was in a hybrid form as only Kazım Koyuncu and Memedali
Barış Beşli were the Laz among its other Turkish and Kurdish members. Their music
was considerably influential on the Laz youth some of whom had later involved in
similar performances.154
For them, their music was not for fun, but a political act, a request for
recognition of the Laz language. In their speeches on the stage, they explicitly expressed
their identities and their purposes. 155 Moreover, they regarded themselves as Laz
activists because for them the most important part of their culture was their language,
which was legally forbidden until about a decade ago. The musicologist and musician
Ayşenur Kolivar emphasizes the same argument:
What one could find in their music is not the traditional culture or not even the present culture in the traditional geography. Instead, what is expressed is the migrant Laz culture of the new generation of young immigrants in metropolitan cities, who dislike many aspects of their own tradition except their language and dance. The distinction between Laz music and music in Laz language expresses the cultural distinction of the migrants from the traditional one. The identity they adopt is not the traditional Laz culture living in the villages. Instead, they tried to shape a
154 Both Birol Topaloğlu and Erdal Bayrakroğlu mentioned about this influence during their intervews.
155 Ayşenur Kolivar, “Kentli Bir Yerel Kimlik Temsili Olarak Karadeniz Rock, Müzikte Temsil ve Müziksel Temsil II Sempozyumu” 20 October 2010
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modern, urban Laz identity for mass of Laz migrants living in big cities.156
In 1998, two young Laz prepared a 9000 word Laz-Turkish dictionary. This
dictionary was a concrete evidence of the Laz language as well as culture, for those who
find it deficient. Neither İsmail Avcı nor Hasan Uzunhasanoğlu were linguists but only
amateur researchers who were passionate about their language. Their effort did not only
aim at exposing the Laz language but also opening more room for communication
among different dialects. This was one of the efforts to “imagine”157 the Laz community.
Informed by Benedict Anderson’s point of view, I suggest that the dictionary enabled
the Laz people to perceive Lazness as an abstract category transcending their locality.
Despite the controversy about the standardization (which dialect and alphabet to
be taken as standard?), the general opinion is that the survival of the Laz language
depends on literacy. While there have been several efforts to improve the written forms
of the Laz language, the writing in Laz is not still very widespread among the Laz. Not
only book and magazines but also the web sites are the popular spheres of these
discussions on language.
Even though there have been hot debates on mother language
education/education in mother language particularly associated with the Kurdish
community, the subject is rather silenced within the Laz community. Therefore the
demand of some Laz intellectuals from the state to provide Laz language education
remains marginal. Besides, the education in Laz language even exceeds the visions of
156 Ayşenur Kolivar, 20 October 2010
157 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities : Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, London ; New York: Verso, 1991
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the intellectuals. On the other hand, despite the frequent urge for revitalizing the
language, most of those declarations were made in Turkish.
Besides writing in and about their language, some intellectuals are actively
performing the language in their everyday lives. For example, they insistently speak Laz
with their children158, give them name in Laz, hire Laz speaking babysitters from
Georgia. Meanwhile, using Laz words for firm names have become popular either in the
city or in the rural within the public.
Constructing the Laz Culture
Jean-François Bayart says, “in its political ambivalence the formation of
imagined cultural communities has been one of the most important ideological
manifestations of globalization since the nineteenth century.”159 And “from one space or
historical landscape to another the intersection of the processes of inventing tradition,
which has been constitutive of the general movement of globalization for more than a
century, remind us that there is no culture that is not created, and that this creation is
usually recent.” 160
In this respect, my main concern is how the fragments of a more or less
phantasmal past were instrumentalized in the service of reconstructing the ‘Laz identity’.
158 One of those children of 5 was objecting to be speking in Laz saying ‘children can’t be Laz, I will be Laz when I grow up!”
159 Jean-François Bayart, The Illusion of Cultural Identity, University of Chicago Press (Co-published with C. Hurst & Co.), 2005, p.40
160 ibid, p.59
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At this point I come across with the fact that those fragments were almost ‘responses’ to
the Laz stereotype. I mean, the elements that the intellectuals dwell on are by majority
the ones associated with the stereotypes. That is to say ‘we are not like that, but we are
like this”. Therefore language, music and dance become significant facts of the Laz
identity.
At this point I would like to mention the effect of the opening of the Georgian
border in 1988. Chris and Ildiko Beller Hann say, “we found no evidence that the
opening of the border had created any new sense of cultural distinctiveness and a related
ethnic consciousness, either among Laz or among any other group”161. In contrast to
their observation, I argue that, by the opening of the border, the Laz and especially the
Laz intellectuals were able to imagine Lazness as an identity crossing the national
borders. Furthermore, the visits beyond the border were providing the intellectuals
means to discover “the cultural roots” that they assumed to have vanished. Thus, I claim
that from celebrating an ancient Colchis festival Colkhoba 162 to compiling tunes163,
from tracing the memories and heritage of Hasan Helimişi164 to researching historical
archives, opening of the border has been highly influential on the Laz intellectuals.
161 Chris Hann and Ildiko Beller Hann “Markets, Morality and Modernty in North-East Turkey” in Border Identities: Nation and State at International Frontiers, Cambridge University Press, Thomas M. Wilson,Hastings Donnan (Eds.), 1998, p. 257-58
162 Mathijs Pelkmans, Defending the Border: Identity, Religion and Modernity in the Republic of Georgia, New York: Cornell University Press, 2006, p. 61
163 Both Birol Topaloğlu and Kazım Koyuncu visited Georgia and collected some of their songs for their albums.
164 Hasan Helimişi (1907-1976) is known as the creator and leading exponent of modern Laz poetry and painting. Many of the artist's works were lost when he left for the USSR in 1932 and during his exile. He made voice recordings of all his remaining works in the Laz language and his paintings are kept in the archives of the Batum Museum. “Death of the Poet”, 2009, Director: Elif Ergezen
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In 1992, a young Laz student, Ismail Avcı, who came to Istanbul for his
computer-training played a crucial role in the Laz Cultural Movement. During his
education, longing for his hometown and passionate about horon, Avcı decided to set up
a horon group in the folklore club at Marmara University.165 The horon dance from the
Trabzon region played with the kemençe166 is already recognized through the national
education, folklore contests, and popular shows.167 The horon from Laz and Hemşin
region accompanied by the tulum168 was however, not recognized at all at that time.
Their first goal was to find young Laz people around university campuses throughout
Istanbul to dance horon. They were successful indeed—they founded not only a horon
group but gave birth to the eventual actors of the Laz Cultural Movement.
Their rehearsals turned out to be a spectacular show which attracted the students
around who were not familiar with this particular dance. 169 The sense of dancing for an
audience must have motivated them because they decided to perform for a show in the
165 The interview with İsmail Avcı, from the archive of BGST(Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu) 2009.
166 The kemençe is a musical instrument which is a bottle-shaped lute with three strings, closely related to the Pontic lyra found in the Black Sea region of Turkey, It is played in the downright position, either by resting it on the knee when sitting, or held in front of the player when standing.
167 Horon part was the most glamorous one in the Sultans of the Dance. The effect of the show was to be proud of being Turk though at the end and consequently horon was the most spectacular thus, flattering in terms of national proud. (Dehmen, 2003)
168 The tulum (guda in Laz) is a wind type musical instrument, a form of bagpipe that is droneless with two parallel chanters, usually played by the Laz, Hemşin people in Turkey. Tulum is generally made from lamb or kid skin which consists of three parts with leather section, ‘nav’ and mouth piece. The air is stored in the leather section and is let into the nav section by pressing the bag under the arm. Nav is the part where the melody is played.
169 From the interview with Mine Kalaycı in May 2010, from the relevant horon group then. She later performed as a vocalist for Birol Topaloğlu and Kazım Koyuncu an done of the members of my band Dalepe Nena.
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school. However, the university administration did not allow them to perform for
‘political reasons’.170 It would be speculative to claim that the horon itself was
considered to be ‘politically unfavorable’ but the banning of the show was real.
The group carried on dancing with changing cadres (even I participated in it for a
while) in different places including such hometown associations as the Pazar Hometown
Association. The group performed in concerts, hometown associations’ parties, etc.
However, it was most spectacular and fun when performed not on the stage but at a
public space such as, Taksim square or Kadıköy pier. It seemed as if the more
inconvenient was the place the more it was passionate to perform. It was obviously a
demonstration for demanding a public recognition for horon and consequently Lazness.
In the following years, the horon groups were attempting to compile different horon
styles and putting on shows by standardizing and stylizing.
November 1997 was a turning point in my personal history, when I encountered
‘Lazness’ outside of my family, in other words my perception of Lazness as a secluded
culture changed dramatically when I was introduced to the album of ‘Heyamo’171 by
Birol Topaloğlu.
The musical form in this album was completely different than I knew as ‘Laz
music’ before. First of all, I did not know that Laz used kemençe traditionally in a
different way than popularly represented as extremely rhythmic accompanied by absurd
lyrics. I was not familiar with any of those tunes at first. However, I was soon going to
discover similar sort of music from my village when I asked some elders to perform. In
170 Kalaycı thinks it was because some of the members of the group having political background which might have been as threatening by the administration.
171 Heyamo, Birol Topaloğlu, Kalan Müzik, 1997
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short, I was able to embrace Topaloğlu’s music considering instruments, vocals and
arrangements. Besides, I was familiar with the language. Also, it was pretty flattering to
see some musicians I knew already as contributors to the album like Erkan Oğur, Kardeş
Türküler, Grup Yorum etc. This meant that Lazness was getting out of its pejorative and
specific position with which I rarely identified with. However, my parents were not as
enthusiastic as me and complained about their difficulty in understanding his dialect.172
Except the dialect problem, they were not that surprised by the music because they were
already familiar with it from their childhood. Birol Topaloğlu confirms my observation:
There are two age groups that appreciate my works respectfully, the elders and the youth. The elders like me because I sing destan, which almost no one sings nowadays, and I revitalize their memory. Secondly, the youth like me because they acknowledge a respectful Laz music through the music I perform. The middle aged are not keen on me because they see themselves when looking at me, a memory that they made the most of to erase in order to integrate, to be modern. Particularly those who are confused about their Laz identity don’t actually consume my music.173
At this point, I can differentiate my Laz identity from that of my parents. If the
identity is always a construction, then there are different constructions in our cases.
While I constructed my identity with my own experience of Lazness, my parents did
172 Birol Topaloğlu says that people are prejeduced about the dialect issue. If they pay attention to the lycrics there is no way not to understand but it is our people’s tendency when you don’t talk with their dialect they do not accept your dialect as Laz.” Interview with Birol Topaloğlu, 16.9.2010 in Balat
173 “İki yaş grubu var ki yaptığım işleri seviyor, takdir ediyor, birincisi yaşlılar ikincisi de gençler. Yaşlılar beni seviyor çünkü destan söylüyorum, çünkü artık söyleyen kalmadı ve eskileri hatırlıyorlar böylece. Gençlerin beni sevme nedeni ise Laz müziğini saygı duyulur bir biçimde icra etmem. Orta yaşlılarsa pek sevmiyorlar beni çünkü bana bakınca kendilerini görüyorlar. Modern olabilmek, entegre olabilmek adına o hafızayı silmek adına her şeyi yaptılar zamanında. Kimlikleriyle ilgili kafaları karışık olanlar genelde beni dinlemiyorlar.” Interview with Birol Topaloğlu, 16.9.2010 in Balat
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with their own experiences. Even there may be some intersecting points, still they should
not be treated in the same way.
For example, as Lazness meant the tough village life conditions for my mother,
she was not that enthusiastic when she listened to the songs of Topaloğlu until when she
heard a tune revitalizing her childhood memories. And for me, Lazness only signified
the unpleasant stereotype which I had chance to turn into a positive one with this single
album.
The album Heyamo, where all the lyrics are in the Laz language, was in some
way a gate opening to the world without affiliating with Turkishness: neither with the
language nor through music. (There was no bağlama at all) That gate was so striking for
me, apparently as well as for my generation. At the other side of the gate, however, there
was a new possibility of Laz identity for me. It must be as surprising for Topaloğlu too,
who emphasizes how the album attracted worldwide attention even before it was
launched. We can say that the more his album circulated around the world, the more
appreciation he received from the Laz community.
His musical journey actually is a good example of the Laz region’s musical
history starting with bağlama and ending up with tulum and kemençe. When he was
giving concerts at universities and leftist environments he played Laz tunes too with his
bağlama, which were attracting attention and people encouraged him to carry on. When
the album of Zuğaşi Berepe was launched he came to realize that it was not a dream to
produce an album of Laz music. Once his sense of Laz identity strengthened through his
relations with Ogni circle, and his compilations on Laz music in Laz region, the journeys
to Laz region in Georgia made him to decide to make an album with only in Laz
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language. Realizing the context of bağlama, he developed a consciousness about the
local instruments and instantly left bağlama for good.174
The Movement mainly emerged in Istanbul and other metropolises and
surprisingly “there was little sign that these intellectual activities in the diaspora were
affecting notions of self and identity in the homeland”175. Once, I came across with a
complaint from a Laz living in Fındıklı: ‘they (the intellectuals living in urban) talk
about Lazness but they do not care about us at all. They are the subjects and we are the
objects of the Laz Cultural Movement.” The following anecdote also confirms his
interpretation.
Once, the intellectuals were planning a meeting in Istanbul gathering Laz from
different social groups to discuss the ‘fate’ of the Laz culture. When I suggest inviting
people from the region, one of the leaders’ words were shocking for me: “Oh yes, that’s
a good idea. But there are no men left in the region. All the qualified ones moved to big
cities and now there is no one that we can invite to this meeting.”
On the other hand, The Movement had a significant branch in Germany where
the academic works of German scientists on the Laz culture were influential. At the
beginning of the 1990s, the Lazebura176 workshop was founded in Germany supported
by the academic works of Wolfgang Feurstein, an anthropologist working about the Laz
culture. In his interview with Neal Ascherson, Feurstein admits that he could not have
174 Interview with Birol Topaloğlu, April 2010 in Balat.
175 Chris Hann and Ildiko Beller Hann “Markets, Morality and Modernty in North-East Turkey” in Border Identities: Nation and State at International Frontiers, Cambridge University Press, Thomas M. Wilson, Hastings Donnan (Eds.), 1998, p. 257
176 About Lazness
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been just a researcher but an activist who is a volunteer for revitalizing the Laz language
which faces the danger of extinction.177 Feurstein, in cooperation with Fahri Lazoğlu,
has devised an alphabet for Laz language that relies for the most part on modern Turkish
characters178 which has been widely used within the revitalization movement.179 Those
works were influential on the Laz expatriates, particularly the political asylum seekers
living in Germany which then enabled the foundation of Lazebura in 1998.
Selma Koçiva, a political refugee living in Germany, who is one of the important
actors of the movement, published her book Lazona.alk 180 She wrote about her passion
for the Laz culture and accepted this revitalization movement as part of her
revolutionary way of life. She was excluded though, even within the movement because
of her ‘marginal’ political background. Even though, more or less all the leading actors
of this movement had a past experience of joining the left political or social
environments, her idealization of the Kurdish movement in terms of constructing a
political identity, her respect for their outspoken demand of cultural rights from the state
were not considered in favorable terms by these circles. Probably, living abroad also
means being free of such “condemnations.” Moreover, she was also considered ‘too
177 Neal Ascherson, Karadeniz, İşbankası Yayınları, Istanbul, 2001, p. 262
178 Chris Hann and Ildiko Beller Hann “Markets, Morality and Modernty in North-East Turkey” in Border Identities: Nation and State at International Frontiers, Cambridge University Press, Thomas M. Wilson, Hastings Donnan (Eds.), 1998, p. 257
179 Selma Koçiva tells how this alphabet circulated within the Laz community with excitement as well as fear. She says the migrants were taking the alpabet from Germany to Turkey inside the shirt packages in order to hide it from the Turkish state. A Seminar in Gola Association, in İstanbul, 9 May 2010.
180 Lazona means “The Laz land”. Selma Koçiva, Lazona Laz Halk Gerçekliği Üzerine, Tüm Zamanlar Yayıncılık, Istanbul, 2000
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political’ for a woman. Typically, while the women are praised for being the conveyers
of the Laz culture, they are marginalized when they are political subjects.
Even though men are in majority among the actors of the Movement, the number
of women is increasing. For example, while there were not any horon conductors and
tulum players earlier, there are many now, although their presence in the academy is still
very negligible.
The Laz Cultural Movement can be described as an effort to substantiate the
notion of ‘Laz culture’. Thus they treat the ‘Laz culture’ as timeless and stable which
obviously means standardization and homogenizing. Even though there were discussions
on diversity in the movement, everyone was putting his/her Lazness in the centre. The
discussions were frequently on the dialects of the language, while some were claiming
the Hopa dialect to be the oldest and original in contrast with the ones considering the
Pazar dialect as the most essential.
To mention other examples of the discourse on culture: the typical architecture
that can be seen in the whole Eastern Black Sea region is called ‘traditional Laz
architecture’181. And on a women’s day celebration, there was a discussion about what
being a Laz woman means, assuming that there is only one single common experience.
Some Laz intellectuals even claim that Laz culture is ‘matriarchal’ basing their argument
on an suffix (-ona) that is used to call a person with his/her mother’s or grandmother’s
family name when that woman has a significant role in the family. Similarly, Kazım
Koyuncu was emphasizing how the women were playing important roles in the culture
181 Kamil Aksoylu, Laz Kültürü, Tarih, Dil, Gelenek ve Toplumsal Yapı, Phoenix Yayınevi, Ankara, 2009, p. 79
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by interpreting the word ‘oxori’ (house) coming from the appendix –oxo (woman).182
This example could also be interpreted as the ‘house’ being the domestic place of
‘woman’. These examples also strengthen the ‘Black Sea woman’ stereotype as
‘powerful’ and ‘resistant’.183
The intellectuals in the movement pay lip service to the ‘cultural difference’
suspending any ‘seperatist’ marking. In short, the Laz Cultural Movement mimics the
nation state who constructs the national identity by defining the cultural realm through
the categories like language, music, dance, folklore, architecture etc. As Meltem Ahıska
says, the object of the power discourse may inevitably turn into the object of the
oppositional discourse.184
I have discussed the heterogeneity of the movement before, now I would like to
mention another approach which privileges the Laz identity in a higher status while
scaling it under the Turkish identity. The documentary film shot in 2008, ‘The History
of 4000 Years: Lazlar’185, sponsored by EU funds as a part of the project ‘the Place of
182 “Lazlar’da kadının çok önemli bir yeri olduğunu söyleyen Koyuncu, bunu, çocukluğundan bir örnekle anlatıyor. "Laz kadınını düşününce aklıma rahmetli babannem gelir. O tam bir Laz kadınıydı. Çok güçlüydü ve ailede her zaman karar yetkisi vardı. Tulumun sesini duydu mu yumuşar, sanki kadınlığını hatırlardı. Lazcada ev "Oxori" demek. Bu kelime, kadın anlamına gelen "oxo"dan türemiştir." Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, Akşam Gazetesi - 03 February 2003
183 While I was writing my thesis in March 2011, a group of urban-dweller women gathered through the network of ecological movement Karadeniz İsyandadır, decided to organize a women’s day cortege under the name ‘Black Sea’s Rebel Women’. In their manifestation, they were praising how the Black Sea/Laz women were powerful ( referring to the “pasive” Kurdish women obviously ) ignoring the injustice jobshare in the household or the ‘Nataşa’ phenomenon problems of the Black Sea women after the opening of the Georgian border. On the other hand, Kurdish women were prominently political in the public sphere much more, compared with Laz/Black Sea women.
184 Meltem Ahıska, Kimlik Kavramı Üstüne Fragmanlar, Defter, V. 27, Metis Yayıncılık, İstanbul. 1996, p. 21
185 ‘4000 yıllık Tarih Lazlar’, Funda Özyurt, 2008
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the Laz in the Turkish Cultural Mosaic’186 used the notions of ‘history’ and ‘culture’ in
that respect. On the one hand, directly praising the history and culture of the Laz, and
reminding their loyalty to the state through some narrative and visual discourses, on the
other. 187 While praising the Laz for their intelligence, the documentary was stressing on
the mutual national culture and history by, for example, mentioning the ‘Armenians’
abuse’ in 1910s and the Independence War.
An Institution between the Intellectuals and the People: Sima
So far I have assumed a divergence between the intellectuals and the people in
terms of their definition of the Laz identity. Here, I would like to focus on another
sphere between the two groups. Through my analysis of Sima, an association embracing
the Laz identity, I would like to emphasize the context of the Laz identity in which it
was articulated within the nationalist hegemonic discourse.
The reason why I position Sima between the intellectuals and the people is
simply because I interpret the leaders’ efforts as opening up a space for the
representation of the Laz identity while refraining from marginalization, therefore
having affiliations with the capital and state circles.
186 ‘Türk Kültür Mozaiğinde Lazların Yeri’
187 One of the informants said ‘the Turkish language is as important as Laz language where they are both under invasion of English’. And it was likely to see the Turkish flag during the document as a part of the artistic construction of the scene. (For example people were carrying Turkish flag while dancing horon.)
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Even though there have been several attempts to found a Laz institution since
1992,188 in 1996, the delayed task was realized in Izmit. The name of the first Laz
Association is called Sima Eastern Black Sea Service Association (Sima Doğu
Karadenizliler Hizmet Vakfı). In May 2010, I went to Sima upon the invitation of
Yılmaz Avcı (one of the board directors) who was so enthusiastic to gather all the Laz
associations together. The story of the name Sima, actually summarizes the kind of
dilemma that a group of middle class Laz experiences, who wants to preserve the Laz
identity but at the same time obsessively fears being stigmatized in society. Gülay
Burhan, the chief of Sima said:
There were long discussions about whether there should be the name ‘Laz’ in the name of the Association or not, at the end they decided not to do so. They (the board of directors) gave the name Sima, meaning you and me in Laz and ‘face’ in Turkish. As you know the conjecture of Turkey was not like that at that time. They hesitated of the name Laz. But in the constitution text, it is written that we serve to the Laz towns without mentioning Laz. But nowadays we are discussing to change the name and put the Laz in. 189
Yılmaz Avcı confirmed the hot debates on the employment of the name Laz
during the founding process of the association, remembering someone who shouted ‘Ne
Mutlu Türküm Diyene during the meeting!”190 Burhan added that people from other
Eastern Black Sea hometown associations were quite angry with them serving only the
Laz population despite the reference of ‘Eastern Black Sea’ in the name.
188 Ahmet Kırım’s personal archive, the presentation text of the meeting, 5. 12. 1992
189 Gülay Burhan, meeting in Sima, 29 May 2010, Izmit
190 Happy is the one who says I am a Turk!
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When we went out of Sima with my friend and carrying on our conversation
about Laz identity my friend said ‘Laz youth is squeezed between Laz nationalism and
Turkish nationalism.’ The security guard waiting in front of the apartment stepped in the
conversation at this moment saying “Can I ask you something? Do you think Laz youth
and Turkish youth are two different things, I don’t think so.” My friend replied as “How
dare you interfere in our conversation. Who are you?” he asked. “I am Laz, too. My
family migrated from Batum to Of and I think there are no two different youths, no!”
This small dialogue demonstrates that Lazness can still be a controversial and
tense subject in 2010. When we arrived at the restaurant that Gülay Burhan and his
father were running, called Motali (Dear grandson/daughter), I had a chance to listen to
the story of the foundation from Orhan Bayramin (the first chief). He said before Sima,
he run Artvinliler and then Arhavililer Hometown Associations, and while he was
running Arhavililer Derneği, they organized a picnic which was enormously popular. As
Arhavi is the only town whose population is only Laz, members of other Laz towns’
hometown associations joined the picnic in the following year massively. At this second
picnic, it was obvious for the founders that the Laz were eager to socialize with other
Laz. Then they founded the association.
Some Laz intellectuals from Istanbul were criticizing them as being conservative,
though, inviting all the military and governmental protocol at the opening including the
old minister Meral Akşener from Nationalist Action Party (MHP).
The first chief of Sima told me that at the beginning of the foundation they
established an insurance agency in order to make money for the association.
Surprisingly, they did not hesitate to franchise the army’s insurance agency OYAK.
Meanwhile they were about to publish a magazine of Sima about Laz culture. They put a
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map of Laz region in the Black Sea. Once the magazine was published, their agency was
cancelled instantly due to the separatist connotations of the map. This particular
anecdote describes well how Sima positioned itself next to the power and was so
confident that they did not hesitate to launch such a politically charged image.
Another anecdote is also useful for understanding how the Laz identity has been
shaped with the notion of ‘class’. The first chief of Sima Orhan Bayramin complained
about one of the old chiefs, a building contractor (müteahhit) taking advantage of the
Sima network providing a business network for himself. Thus, Bayramin claimed that
chief affiliated with non-Laz Black Sea community in order to do so. Bayramin admitted
that he warned him both by writing and orally, accusing him of distorting the
‘homogeneity’ of Sima. Additionally, he made a quotation from him during a speech in
the Sima invitation: “The Laz, have never been a minority in this country”. After this
murmur, my friend remembered that during the relevant chief’s period, they attended the
traditional Sima picnic with her family, usually with Laz rituals and entertainment, they
noticed that there was little Lazness such as, a lot of kemençe instead of tulum, very few
Laz songs, etc. I find this single anecdote quite significant in demonstrating how the
performance of Lazness changes when affiliated with Turkishness and the capital.
From the folkloric events they organized191, to the visual organization of the
place,192 Sima was positioning Laz identity within the existing power structures too, in
191 Yılmaz Avcı admitted that they did not do anything at all apart from folkloric events for the Laz culture. He was thus so enthusiastic to gather all the associations believing that one single person/association cannot help Laz. He was aware of the fact that Laz are not good at cooperation though.
192 As far as I could see, the Association was more like a coffee-house. There was a poster of Atatürk at one side, a picture from Uzungöl on the other. There was also the poster of Kazım Koyuncu and some other Laz bands. In a glass display, there were the news about Sima took place in the press, and some photos with from people in high positions including the Kocaeli representative of Nationalist Action Party.
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that case, demanding nothing for the Laz in terms of cultural claims but treating the Laz
identity as a folkloric entity. Their efforts to legitimate Lazness through the cooperation
with the capital and the people from hegemonic status apparently failed in terms of
opening up any space for the Laz in politics. The main function of the foundation was to
enable the middle class Laz families socialize with others. So the contact with other
cultural groups was not very likely within this structure.
Multiculturalist Discourse as a New Governmental Tool
These struggles around the cultural/ethnic identities are taking place within a
context that has been increasingly shaped by the notion of “multiculturalism” as the
cultural politics of Neoliberalism. The term multiculturalism refers to an applied
ideology of racial, cultural and ethnic diversity. However, “one needs to rethink “how”
difference and/or diversity is defined, recognized and staged; whether hierarchical
dichotomies and “othering” mechanisms are challenged or reproduced under the rubric
of multiculturalism; and finally whether multiculturalism is still a proper concept for
resisting monocultural assimilation, or not.193
Moreover, with the rise of the Kurdish struggle in the last decades and the
process of admission to the European Union, Turkey had to change its dominant
discourse on identity politics. The way national identity and national culture was
Moreover, in the amblem of Sima there is an anchor, waves of the sea and sparrow hawk representing the Laz culture.
193 Bedirhan Dehmen, “Appropriations of Folk Dance at the Intersection of the National and the Global : Sultans of the Dance”, Unpublished M.A Thesis, Bogazici University, 2003,p. 84
85
constructed through denying or Turkifying different ethnic groups in Anatolia and the
way national history misrepresented the experiences of these groups started to be
criticized.194
The Laz Cultural Movement was formed under these political circumstances.
However it did not turn into a mass movement itself as the expectations and perception
of the people were rather different from those of the intellectuals. Still, we cannot
underestimate its impact on Lazness as an outcome when we come to the 2000s,
concurring with other determinants like music industry, multicultural discourse, etc.
Towards the 2000s, the Movement added the notion of ‘ecology’ to its discourse
in addition to culture, with the appearance of hot debates on the construction of new
hydroelectric power plants, considering the two as components of the Laz habitat. We
have to underline the Chernobyl case195 at this point where the aggrieved discourse
regarding the Laz as the real victims of the irresponsible state policies on environmental
issues, was in parallel with the “subordination discourse” seeking to strengthen the Laz
identity.
Those efforts of the middle class Laz youth generally were welcomed in the
national media. However, the greetings were still included the reference of the Laz
jokes.196 Most of the journalists encouraged those works as a part of the ‘mosaics’
194 Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004,p. 16 195 The Chernobyl disaster was a well-known nuclear accident of catastrophic proportions that occurred on 26 April 1986, at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine. It is considered the worst nuclear power plant accident in history resulting in the severe release of radioactivity, it is considered as the main reason for the increasing incidence of cancer, especially in the Black Sea region.
196 Ali İhsan Aksamaz, “Dil-Tarih-Kültür-Gelenekleriyle Lazlar”, Sorun Yayınları, 2000, p. 197-268
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discourse, at the same time warning in a threatening way not to accommodate any
separatist intentions. After such a provocative heading: “Are we having another one?”
implicitly referring to the Kurds, Ali Sirmen expresses his positive reception of Ogni:
Why we advice to be positive about it is not because Laz are around hundred thousand, not being majority in any city, rather live dispersedly in all around Turkey and we shouldn’t consider it as a micro-nationalist movement as Ahmet Kırımlı said. To say that Laz institute means the first movement of a separatist flow would be a paranoid reflection like eating yoghurt with care when burnt while drinking milk. 197
Toktamış Ateş, was also welcoming the foundation of the Laz association in his
article at Cumhuriyet. However, it seems not possible to mention about Laz without
associating with the stereotype:
I respected the search for their identity of those (Laz) people who create their own jokes and laugh at them more than anyone, lovely, smart and a little bit obsessive citizens. 198
The Laz Cultural Movement was not taken as a real political threat for the nation
state so far probably because the Laz have been loyal to the state conventionally.
Moreover, due to the influence of the stereotype the Laz were fixed as the objects of the
jokes instead of being a subject of politics; they were not a big population throughout the
country and also the Laz culture have been so invisible that there was nothing left to be
197 “Olaya olumlu yaklaşılmasını önermemizin nedeni, salt Lazların nüfusunun yüz bin dolayında olması ve hemen hemen hiçbir ilde çoğunluk oluşturamamaları ve Türkiye’nin birçok yöresine ; hatta yurt dışına dağılmış biçimde yaşamaları değil. Hatta Ahemt Kırımlı’nın ileri sürdüğü gibi olay mikro-milliyetçilik akımı olarak görülemez. Laz enstitüsü düşüncesi, bir ayrılıkçı akımın ilk tohumlarıdır, demek sütten ağzı yananın yoğurdu üfleyerek yemesinin de ötesinde bir paronaya belirtisi olarak da yorumlanabilir.” Ali Sirmen, “Şimdi de bu mu çıktı?”, Milliyet, 11 October 1992
198 “Kendi fıkralarını kendileri üreten sonra da herkesten çok gülen bu sevimli, zeki ve biraz da takıntılı yurttaşlarımızın kendi benliklerini arama çabalarına saygı duydum.” Toktamış Ateş, Arayış, Cumhuriyet Gazetesi, 27 November, 1993
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afraid of except for a couple of young, exited, middle class, educated (wo)men. I have
arrived at this conclusion in line with the experiences of this generation that I observed
for ten years which has not been subjected to any serious sanction in response to their
cultural, political activities.
Conversely, I think the Laz were setting an ideal example for a multicultural
discourse, as an ethnic group having no political demands apart from “singing their
songs, dancing horon” when it was no longer plausible to insist on a conventional
nationalist discourse at this neoliberal age. When we come to the 2000s, the ideal was so
exaggerated that we face with an excessive visibility of the Laz in the public, compared
to its formerly invisible position. In the next chapter, I will discuss the limits of this
public sphere and how this sphere was constructed through music and dance
performances.
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CHAPTER IV
A CRITICAL REFLECTION ON CULTURAL PERFORMANCES AND
IDENTITY POLITICS IN TURKEY
In this chapter, I will analyze the emergent musical and dance performances of
Laz that took place in the urban landscapes in the 2000s. While claiming those
performances as constructing a new representation and identity for the Laz, I question
whether they open up any space for subjectivity of the Laz in the politics. Eventually, I
will criticize the consequences of those performances as endorsing new scaling in the
society by positioning Laz within the hegemonic discourses.
‘Performance’ as a Critical Tool
Scholars say that we can better understand cultural identity not by studying the
artifacts of museums or libraries but through observing emergent performances.199 Given
that my primary goal in this thesis is to explore the changing context of the Laz identity
in the last decade, it is crucial to investigate Laz cultural performances occurring in
urban settings during this period because Lazness is, today, identified by its
characteristic music and dance. My main concern, therefore, is to understand the
contextual framework of these performances which functioned to transform an
‘invisible’ identity to an excessively ‘visible’ one. By using performance theory, I
believe that one can look into things otherwise closed off to inquiry.
199 Fine, Elizabeth C., and Speer, Jean Haskell, Performance, Culture and Identity, Praeger Publishers, 1992, p. 3
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Looking at cultural performances of music and dance during the first decade of
the twenty first century, one observes that, particularly in Istanbul, they reflect, shape,
and embody today’s Laz identity. Moreover, using the ‘performance’ category enables
me to reflect on the issues at hand within their natural context of constant change. Hence
my concept of ‘performance’ is not static but a dynamic one that enables me to trace
‘transformation’.
Before going into the theoretical detail, I would like to take a moment to revisit
my methodology. My focus group was composed of participants or performers aged 15-
35 and coming from the second generation of Laz migrants. In order to understand their
sense of Laz identity, I attended concerts, meetings, and demonstrations as the
‘performances’. Besides observing the musical aspects (tunes, instruments, lyrics,
rhythm, etc.) of those performances, I took note of the narrative discourses that emerged
during the performances. Thus, the performers, location, and audience were all
significant. Actually, I found those performances enormously interactive in which the
audience plays an important role. I interviewed the performers and audience members,
using both spontaneous and in depth interview methodologies. I also benefited from
already existing interviews accessed from media and archives.200
Moving into theory, Bauman defines performance as “a mode of communicative
behavior and a type of communicative event” or as an “aesthetically marked and
heightened mode of communication, framed in a special way and put a display for an
200 Ayşenur Kolivar and BGST(Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu) opened their archives for me generously.
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audience.”201 Within this theoretical framework, I will demonstrate how the
performances of music and dance changed contextually for the Laz in the last decade.
These performances are, categorically, one of the important instruments for a group of
people to imagine itself as a community.202 Music and dance are significant spheres of
asserting cultural identity203 particularly for rural-origin migrants in cities, who
predominantly define themselves using dominant cultural categories.204
Much of the recent anthropological analysis of performance has emphasized how
performance can work within a society precisely to undermine tradition, to provide a
context for the exploration of fresh and alternative structures and patterns of behavior.205
Therefore, I care about those performances as an attempt to reconstruct the concept of
‘tradition’ by not only the second generation of Laz but also by the migrants from Black
Sea in general.
While interpreting the relevant performances, my main concern was to observe
conflicting and compromising aspects within the context of hegemonic discourse: Were
these performances subverting the Turkish national discourse or reinforcing it?
Considering the popularity of these performances, I attempted to explore at which point
the performances coincide with, and at which points they resist, the hegemonic
201 Richard Bauman, “Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments”, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p. 41
202 Martin Stokes, “Place, Exchange and Meaning: Black Sea Musicians in the West of Ireland”, in Ethnicity Identity and Music: the Musical Construction of Place, Oxford, Berg, 1994, p. 134
203 ibid, p. 139
204 ibid, p. 140
205 Marvin Carlson, Performance: A Critical Introduction, Routledge, 1996, p. 15
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discourse. This is because I question whether these performances open up or close a
space for subjectivity for the Laz.
Kenneth Burke's contribution to the performance theory is that “not only the
work or act but also the agent who creates or performs it, as well as the agency, scene,
and purpose” is important.206 This critical perspective enables me to take into
consideration the performers’ subjectivity and positioning along with their
performances. Thus, focusing on the performers’ profile (including dress, accent,
political stance, chosen repertoire, etc.) enables me to understand how meaning is
generated within or towards the hegemonic discourse.
The Traditional Context and the Popular Representation of Laz Music until
2000s
In the process of transition from the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish nation-state,
the modernization project laid by the Kemalist cadres tried to configure, like many other
cultural elements, musical life, tradition, and preferences. The inspirational father of
Turkish nationalism, the intellectual Ziya Gökalp, offered a roadmap for the creation- or,
as he labels it, a rebirth or recreation- of a new national music. Simply put, this meant
enriching the Anatolian folk songs with Western polyphonic sound structure. Put
another way, it meant the spread of Western music culture throughout society resulting
206 ibid, p.14
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in the revelation of real Turkish folk music and freeing it from the yoke of Ottoman-
Arab culture.207
This simple formulation reflects the paradoxical framework of the whole Turkish
modernization project: revealing Turkish ethnicity on its road to Western civilization
while preventing a fully fledged “degenerated” Westernization for the sake of retaining
the distinctiveness of “Turkishness”. 208 As Necdet Hasgül suggests, “the music
policies-directed by the Westernization and Turkification desires- applied for the sake of
having a modern polyphonic music, meant the “erosion ” of the regional and ethnic
cultures within Anatolia”.209
It is obvious that music “has to be seen as a field of symbolic activity which is
highly important to nation-states.” 210 Parallel to the Turkification policy, folk songs,
belonging to various ethnic groups living in Turkey, were considered either non-existent
or published with arbitrary Turkish lyrics which changed their meanings.211 Since there
were no institutions or agents available to enable the reproduction of the musical forms
out of the dominant culture where they faced extinction. The only tool they had in the
face of this danger was popular music.
207 Ziya Gökalp, Türkçülüğün Esasları, Istanbul: MEB yayınları, 1990, p.33 Cited in Mustafa Poyraz Kolluoğlu, 2010, p. 11
208 Mustafa Poyraz Kolluoğlu, “Modernism in Ottoman Empire and Turkish Music and the Years of 1930s, 1940s”, Unpublished M.A. Thesis, Marmara University, International Relations Department, April 2010, p. 11
209 Hasgül, Necdet, Cumhuriyet Dönemi Müzik Politikaları, in BÜFK V.62, 1996., p. 41
210 Martin Stokes, “Introduction”, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p.15 211 Erol, Mutlu, “Kürt Müziği Üzerine” in Kürt Müziği, eds. Kendal Nezan, Mehrdad R. Izady, Ayako Tatsumara, Erol Mutlu, Christian Poshe, Dieter Christensen, Avesta Yayınları, 1996, p. 60
93
In the twentieth century, many regional and minority folk music repertories were
transmitted by the media- radio, recordings, television, and motion pictures in the world.
These media artifacts have, at times, served as models for all musicians to imitate,
thereby fixing tunes, texts, and styles and working against versions and variants.212 In
the case of Laz music, the compilations213 were realized by personal efforts apart from
the state-manipulated ones in the 1930s and 1940s.
Erol Mutlu explains the effects of this process on Kurdish music by arguing that,
“Turkification policies ruined the ethnic and cultural multiplicity of Anatolia, reducing it
into a singular structure within the new nation-building project. According to Mutlu, this
caused serious erosion in Kurdish music and culture. The outcome was a destroyed
culture that was detached from its roots and characteristics and a distorted musical
structure.” 214
Some intellectuals point out the role of media as an ‘ideological apparatus’.215 In
line with this argument, I find it significant to remember the creation of a “standardized
performing style and a ‘stagnated’ folk song archive which were transmitted to the
people by means of the Yurttan Sesler program on the TRT. During the compiling
process all the folkloric songs in Kurdish, Laz, Greek, Armenian, were “Turkified”216 in
212 Jeff Todd Titon, ‘Music, Folk and Tradition’ in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p.169-170
213 We must mention Birol Topaloğlu’s personal efforts here. As he was known for his compilations, not only from the Laz but also received a reasonable archive in order him to preserve and reveal. Lazeburi, Kalan Music, 2001 and Kizirnos, Colchis Music, 2010
214 ibid, p. 60
215 Louis Althusser, “Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses”, 1971, in Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays, New York: Monthly Review Press, 2001
216 Necdet Hasgül, Cumhuriyet Dönemi Müzik Politikaları, in BÜFK N.62, 1996, p. 43
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the line with the national identity and national language that were modified by the
Turkish Language Institution Inquiry.”217 The TRT archives inherited from the ones
made by Mustafa Sarısözen for the conservatory, did not include lyrics in other
communal languages such as Kurdish and Laz.218 The alternation in lyrics revealed
dramatic and ironic incidents in some folk songs such as the one which was about a train
voyage to Baku converted into a sea voyage to Samsun, because of absence of an
essential Turkish word for the “train” 219 The performances that took place on the TRT
were appropriated carefully with the nationalist ideology. Mutlu suggests that the
practice of Yurttan Sesler, which excluded the original instruments of the music, forced
the performance into a standardized instrumentation based heavily on different types of
bağlama. He considers this one of the last steps in the Turkification process. 220
While all solo singers perform to the accompaniment of the central Anatolian saz
or bağlama, they are accompanied by other instruments as well as various solo regional
instruments which indicate regional identity. As “a mey (a small double reed aerophone)
represents the South East, a kabak kemane (a gourd fiddle) represents the Aegean, the
accordion represents the North East, and so on. In the same way, the kemençe represents
the Black Sea.”221
217 Mustafa Poyraz Kolluoğlu, “Modernism in Ottoman Empire and Turkish Music and the Years of 1930s, 1940s”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Marmara University , International Relations Department, April 2010 p. 148
218 Besides the transforming lyrics from other ethnic languages to Turkish, the TRT also standardized Turkish accents from different regions.
219 ibid p. 148-149
220 Erol, Mutlu, 1996, p. 60
221 Martin Stokes, Place, Exchange and Meaning: Black Sea Musicians in the West of Ireland, in Ethnicity Identity and Music: the Musical Construction of Place, Oxford, Berg, 1994, p. 104
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As Martin Stokes tells us, kemençe is situated as a part of national culture (milli
kültür), in a hierarchical order with the primary traditional musical instrument
‘bağlama’. “The kemençe was widely considered to be a difficult instrument, with an
uncompromising sound meaningful only to Black Sea people, whose fingering and
performance is not reducible to a simple, teachable form. For some, the instrument
palpably lacks what the bağlama is considered to possess in abundance: mantık
(logic)”222. Consequently, kemençe is expected to accommodate the bağlama because
“all rural folk music is ultimately reducible to that which can be played on the bağlama.
This instrument is held to have a particular “ethnic” association with the Turks of Asia
as well as Asia Minor.”223 “Its use is iconic, in that its complex textures are often played
down in the mix, but it figures heavily as an image in the televised broadcasts of these
programmes featuring ‘regional’ singers. The TRT has its own distinct vision of the
Black Sea as one regional musical style amongst a number of others. Like them, the
Black Sea can be reduced in musical performance to an element in an orderly vision of a
regionally diverse yet culturally unified state”.224
Performance, like any form of communication, carries the potential to rearrange
the structure of social relations within the performance event and perhaps beyond it.225
In this respect, Martin Stokes’ example is relevant to our subject. He explicates how the
traditional hierarchal positions of the instruments and the positions of the musicians
222 ibid, p. 107
223 ibid, p. 107
224 ibid, p. 104-5
225 Richard Bauman, ‘Introduction’ in Story, Performance and Event, Cambridge University Press, 1986 p.4
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were inverted when a group of Black Sea musicians, representing “Turkish” folk music,
went to perform in an Irish festival.
When performing the Black Sea regional music preserving the command structure and hierarchy of instruments within the group typical of a Turkish Radio and Television ensemble they received poor appreciation from the Irish audience. Within that structure, bağlama is in the foreground and kemençe must reduce the complex interplay of polyphonic textures and inner rhythms of it to a single dimension in order to accommodate the bağlama. However the musicians tended to perform the Black Sea music as performed locally (kemençe is in the foreground, and performed in the style characteristics of the kemençe) when the Irish audience were much more enthusiastic with the performance.226
The above example reveals that instead of the nationalist constructed
performance, the locality (Black Sea region) may manage to communicate in some
contexts. This particular example shows us how “performance does not simply convey
cultural messages already ‘known’. On the contrary, it reorganizes and manipulates
everyday experiences of social reality, blurs, elides, ironizes and sometimes subverts
commonsense categories and markers.”227
“Music is socially meaningful not entirely but largely”, says Stokes, “because it
provides means by which people recognize identities and the boundaries which separate
them.”228 Music is used by social actors in specific local situations to erect and maintain
distinctions between us and them, and terms such as ‘authenticity’ are used to justify
226 Stokes, Martin, 1994, p. 108
227 ibid, p. 97
228 Martin Stokes, “Introduction”, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p.5
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these boundaries.229 In the present, as well as in the past, music has been one of the
important indicators of Laz identity. Since Laz culture has been transmitted orally for
centuries, the oral cultural features like music have been foundational for cultural
reproduction and memory. However, I suggest that the affiliation with the modern life
and written culture (the literacy in Turkish) has fundamentally transformed the music in
Laz culture not only through the language but also the musicality.
There are different genres within Laz music which emerge in the appropriate
context similar to other folk music. These include bgara (lament), destan (epic song),
horon (collective dance songs), nani (lullaby), heyamo (work songs), and atma türkü
(duet songs).230 Musician Topaloğlu also emphasizes the spatial context of the music:
The destans (epic songs) were performed in the outdoors usually when a person was alone and usually expresses his/her grief. Women sing when working in the garden, where their voice is anonymous and after the weddings under the serender (food store) away from the crowd. Destans were a basic component of the Laz music, however they evaporated after the 1970s, when mass communication arose.231
I agree with Topaloğlu on his point that destan performances as well as other
forms of Laz music vanished quicker than horon which survived because it served a
purpose larger than simply ‘communication’. To put it other words, survival of the
229 ibid, p.6
230 However, if one were to ask an old Laz villager woman about her music, she would probably not give an example of a ‘bgara’ or a lullaby simply because she does not classify these as ‘music’. Like the music itself, these categories are ‘modern’ established by the Laz intellectuals in the last decade.
231 “Destanlar açık alanlarda, insanlar kendi başlarına kaldıklarında dertlerini dökmek için söylenirdi. Kadınlar genelde bahçede söylerlerdi sesleri kimin olduğu anlaşılmasın diye. Bir de düğünlerden sonra kalabalık çekildikten sonra serenderin altına geçilip söylenirdi. Destanlar Laz müziğinin en önemli formlarından biri olmasına rağmen, 1970’lerdn itibaren iletişimin gelişiyle birlikte buharlaştı.” Destan workshop conducted by Birol Topaloğlu in Gola Culture Arts and Ecology NGO in Beyoğlu, 9 February 2009.
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horon was made possible by transforming it from ritual to a bodily entertainment and a
spectacular show related to the notion of ‘velocity’ in the culture of modernity as I will
elaborate later in the text. In my opinion, with the everyday life changes in the last fifty
years in the region in terms of productions (tea farming) and consequent migration, the
music was inevitably influenced. For example, tea farming disposed of agricultural life
and the phenomenon of meci (collective work) and thus the collective work songs also
disappeared. Moreover, the destan form was not compatible with modern life at all
because the hegemony of the written culture disabled the oral cultural productions as
well as the transmittance (usually improvised) through memory to the young
generations. 232
In the rural context, Laz music has traditionally arisen “from its context, from
what it communicates in the performance situation”233 as the Armenian musicologist
Gomidas’ following quotation also confirms:
The villagers are quite strict about the context of songs from different categories. All songs must be performed in a relevant context such as the work songs to be performed in the work place and the domestic songs are at home. A villager cannot possibly perform a harvest song at home. Thus, when a non-villager asks a villager to perform a song they would probably refuse to do so just because it is weird to perform a song apart from its related time and space. Every song is strictly related
232 It is true that there is a large demand for music in high bits in all musical genres in Turkey as well as in the world as a part of the increasing value of the notion of ‘velocity’ through modernity. Thus, not only destans in Laz music but also other similar slow musical forms (like dengbejs in Kurdish music) tend to dissappear.
233 Jeff Todd Titon, “Music, Folk and Tradition” in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p.168
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with a ‘moment’ in the village life and once it is ruptured from its context, s/he wouldn’t comprehend, create or use it.234
So we can say that musical performances in the village are rather different than
in the urban context. In the urban context, one can listen to a destan song followed by a
horon song a few minutes later, and then a destan again. To put it in other words, one of
the most important differences between the rural and the urban Laz music is their
changing contextual determinants.
Another aspect that I would like to mention about Laz music is its ‘interaction’
with other ethnic groups’ music as it would be an unrealistic to claim an essentialist
point of view. Referring to Stokes again, “the ‘places’ constructed through music
involve notions of difference and social boundary.” 235 As a part of constructing one’s
identity, typically, there is always a controversy on music between physically close
cultural groups. This is the case between the Laz and Hemşin people where some tunes
belong to one or the other. On the other hand, in the urban context, the interaction takes
place with other musical genres (like rock, pop, arabesque, etc.) and instruments.236
When we talk about music and dance performances of the Laz, weddings are the
only public sphere in which collective performances occurred in the urban context until
the 2000s. Horon dance accompanied by tulum has been performed mostly in the
weddings or celebrations as well as (less commonly) in the hometown associations. In
the city and the town centers of the Laz region after the 1970s, when the weddings were
234 Tamar Nalcı (Ed.) Gomidas Bu Toprağın Sesi, Doğumunun 140. ve Ölümünün 75. Yılında, Published as a Project of 2010 Istanbul European Capital of Culture, MAS Matbaacılık, 2010
235 Martin Stokes, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p. 3
236 Obviously this interaction does not stay in the urban but also dispersed to the rural.
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supposed to take place in the düğün salonu (wedding halls), there was little time for
horon (dance) with tulum.237 Instead, tunes from the repertoire of the ‘national
potpourri’ from all over the country from ‘misket’ to ‘halay’ were played particularly in
the 1980s and the 1990s, on a keyboard located on a stage. Towards the 1990s, besides
rare performances, the new generation was even less enthusiastic about learning horon
and other traditional musical forms.
What seems interesting to me is that horon and singing began to separate during
these times. For example, while there was time for singing atma türkü (duet song)
during horon, singing was almost abandoned and only horon was performed in the
1990s. That was probably linked to the changing context of the Laz language which was
becoming more isolated and abandoned day after day in this period. On the other hand,
even though the women were allowed in the horon circle, usually in hands of their kins,
horon was quite gendered. The figures were rather masculine and all horon conductors
and tulum players were middle-aged men at that period.
The use of kemençe in Laz music is, in fact, different than the popularly
represented one, ‘Pontic kemençe’ from the Trabzon region. However, it has almost
disappeared in the public performances accompanying destans in rural areas recently.
237 “When people discovered that it was cheaper and less troublesome to organize a wedding in the düğün salonu they left the köy düğünleri (village weddings) instantly. Firstly, there were the western style orchestras playing folk-pop music. At first, there was no horon wih tulum (bagpipe) at all, it was considered as inappropriate. Then it took place at the end of the wedding just for half an hour. Once the organ joined the orchestra, the orchestra disbanded, the organ was the only instrument to play all the instruments itself”. (Ne zaman ki insanlar düğün salonlarındaki düğünlerin daha ucuza geldiğini ve daha dertsiz olduğunu gördü o zaman köy düğünlerinden vazgeçildi. İlk başlarda tulumla horon hiç oynanmıyordu. Buraya uymaz diye düşünüyordu herhalde ki sonradan da sadece düğünün son yarım saati oynanmaya başlandı. Ondan sonra ne zaman ki orkestralar orgu keşfetti ondan sonra orkestralar dağıldı çünkü org, tek başına bütün enstrümanların yerine çalabiliyordu.) Interview with Birol Topaloğlu, 16.9.2010 in Balat
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Once the habitus of destan changed, it disappeared at a dramatic rate. When I first
listened to the album Heyamo, I asked my mother whether we had any kemençe playing
in our history. I was shocked when she referred to one of our relative’s name whom I
had never seen him playing kemençe at all. Not only kemençe itself but also the memory
of kemençe with destans disappeared widely in Laz music in the rural context.
Furthermore, in contrast with the ‘rhythmic’ and ‘joyful’ connotations of kemençe, Laz
kemençe has rather sorrowful characteristic as I mentioned earlier.
Tulum, on the other hand, was completely excluded in the popular representation
until the last couple of years. Now it has become the most popular musical instrument
for the Laz.238 The exclusion of tulum might be because it is such a dominant instrument
in terms of musicality and in no way accommodates bağlama. Besides its dominant
musical characteristics, the challenges of playing tulum in an urban setting makes me
define tulum as an untamable, resistant instrument. For instance, Birol Topaloğlu
discusses the difficulties of practicing the tulum in the apartments in the city. He says, he
had to go into the wardrobe to practice until he moved to his detached house. Similarly,
another tulum player speaks of having to practice in the balcony of his apartment so as
not to disturb neighbors.
The means by which ethnicities (as well as class subcultures) define themselves
via music have to take into account the power relations existing between the groups who
are in a position to define and the groups who are defined. An important and powerful
238 Tulum and horon is a common cultural characteristics shared by Hemşinlis.
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agent in the process of definition has been the recording industry.239 When we look at
the history of recording industry in Turkey, it is possible to find albums launched in the
1970s in the Laz language. However, they had an audience only within the Laz
community. This includes Erkan Ocaklı, Ahmet Güngör, Yaşar Turna, Ayhan Alptekin
and Engin Alptekin. Their music was generally fused with trendy musical genres of their
day such as arabesque and taverna. Moreover, listeners in the Laz region had access to
many tulum albums. It was no earlier than 1993 that Laz language music was presented
to the national market.240
Even though a number of private media channels in the twenty first century have
a ‘local’ concept flourished on TV and radio, the ‘Black Sea’ concept did not include the
Laz language due to the presence of a nationalist broadcasting policy. On the other hand,
pioneer performers of the Laz music with language in the national music market were
Zuğaşi Berepe along with Birol Topaloğlu, and also Grup Yorum, Kardeş Türküler and
Fuat Saka in 1990s. However, in the 2000s, along with other happenings, the
representation of the Laz music reached its peak with Kazım Koyuncu and a new
musical genre appeared on the stage: ‘Black Sea Rock’. This meant that the people as
well as music industry began to have access to Laz music in a different context.
239 Martin Stokes, “Introduction”, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p.20-21
240 Zuğaşi Berepe, Vamişkunan, 1993, Anadolu Müzik
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Kazım Koyuncu and the Emergence of a New Laz Representation
Nowadays when I talk with anybody about the Laz in Turkey, the issue
eventually comes to ‘Kazım Koyuncu’ and I frequently hear the words ‘after Kazım…’
That is to say, for the Laz, he became the symbol for transforming Lazness from an
introverted position to one that is extroverted by introducing the Laz (language, music,
etc.) to the non-Laz community. As a result, he is considered by the Laz to be more than
a musician. In other words, many people in Turkey found out about the existence of the
Laz community and its distinct culture through Kazım Koyuncu as opposed to the
incorrect ‘Laz’ stereotype that was previously circulated.
Kazım Koyuncu is commonly described as “the person who enabled the new
generation of Laz to like the ‘language’ and ‘music’”241 and, more frequently, the person
who presented ‘Black Sea music’242 to a wider community. Obviously, beside Kazım
Koyuncu’s authenticity as a musician and a human, there are some social facts that
enabled his subjectivity that nearly turned him into an icon. I believe this was the
outcome of his relation with the notion of ‘modernity’ and ‘tradition’ through musical
performance as well as narrative discourses.
First of all, I would like to describe the musical and political environment in
which he was involved before his nationwide fame. Kazım Koyuncu was born in 1972,
in Hopa, a province of Artvin by the Georgian border where the population consists of
Laz and Hemşinli. His musical career started in Istanbul, upon his departure from his
241 ‘Koyuncu’dan Horona Davet’, Ercan Çelik, Radikal 04 April 2004
242 "Denizin Çocuğu Giderken Çernobil Sorumsuzluğuna İsyan Başlattı" Hatice Tuncer, Cumhuriyet Gazetesi -03.07.2005
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politics and public management education at Istanbul University. He founded a
‘political’243 music band called ‘Dinmeyen’ in 1992 performing in Turkish. Just after, as
a consequence of his encounter with a Laz cultural activist Mehmedali Barış Beşli, they
founded Zuğaşi Berepe—a rock music band performing in the Laz language. In 1996, as
soon as the band ‘Dinmeyen’ launched their album ‘Sisler Bulvarı’, the group disbanded.
When, in 1998, Zuğaşi Berepe disbanded too, Koyuncu carried on his musical career on
his own.
Kazım Koyuncu’s encounter with Beşli was a turning point for his career.
Despite his earlier indifference to his Laz origin, his affiliation with ‘Lazness’ from this
point would lead him increasingly, until his death, towards being a phenomenon.
When we started to perform in Laz, to be honest, I hadn’t thought about it though. The main interlocutor was Mehmedali Barış Beşli at this subject. He had many ideas. When we were at the beginning, I don’t even remember that I had concerns about Lazness. I was thinking that I was helping to a fellow citizen through friendship; afterwards I was planning to leave. But once I got involved, I felt the enthusiasm, and I must say, I discovered the Laz language, Lazness and homeland when we were performing. 244
Even though Zuğaşi Berepe gained a modest success among university
students245 they were not yet able to reach the Laz. On the other hand, their music,
243 Kazım Koyuncu’s self biography. www.lazuri.com
244 “Şimdi Lazca yapmaya başladığımız zaman işin açıkçası ben çok fazla neden Lazca yapıyoruz diye bir şey düşünmemiştim. Bunun esas muhatabı Mehmedali Barış Beşli’dir. Onun birçok düşünceleri vardı. Ben hatta ilk başlarken çok da işin Lazlık boyutuyla çok fazla alakadar olduğumu hatırlamıyorum. Bir dönem hani ben bu adama yardımcı oldum nede olsa hemşo memleketli niyetiyle yan yana durduk arkadaşlık bağlamında ben sonra sözde gidecektim yani bırakacaktım fakat işin içine girince biraz heyecan kapladı. Lazcayı Lazlığı memleketi şarkılar söylerken keşfetmeye başladığımı söyleyebilirim.” Interview with Kazım koyuncu on Umut Radyo, in Pazar(Rize). 3 February 2004 (Date uncertain)
245 Interview with Kazım Koyuncu by Deniz Durukan http://www.studyoimge.com/makale/986/kazim-koyuncu-yla-soylesi
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particularly in the second album, İgzas in 1998 received a fair amount of appreciation
among music circles. 246 Even though the group was planning to experiment with music
that would be ‘more authentic’ than the rock musical structure of Zuğaşi Berepe, it was
not realized once the group disbanded, and despite his plans of a Turkish album, it was
left to Kazım Koyuncu to realize the ‘slightly modern ethnic music’247 (etnik üstü az
modern) style.
The change of Koyuncu’s plans of a Turkish album in pop-rock sound mainly
derived from the feedback he received from the music industry, when he performed in
second volume of a serial album Salkım Söğüt in 2000248. Metropol music, which was
famous for its ‘leftist’ political stance, launched the series of Salkım Söğüt, displaying
different musical examples from Anatolia. The musicians on the album had political
attitudes similar to that of İlkay Akkaya, Arzu Görücü and Alaaddin Us. Birol Topaloğlu
contributed to the project with three songs in Turkish from the Black Sea region. Kazım
Koyuncu performed in the second volume with two Laz, and one Turkish songs and, due
to his articulate leftist political affinity, can be considered a more appropriate option
than Birol Topaloğlu.
While the Turkish state was developing a ‘multiculturalism’ discourse in the
twenty first century in accord with its liberal economic policies, multicultural and multi-
lingual music was gradually growing in popularity. Performance in ‘other languages’
246 “Viya: Müsekkin Niyetine...” Aslı Atasoy, Radikal Gazetesi - 28 August 2001
247 Etnik Üstü Az Modern... Evrensel Gazetesi - 31 August 2001
248 Etnik Üstü Az Modern... Evrensel Gazetesi - 31 August 2001
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apart from Turkish was gaining legitimacy.249 In a deeply political atmosphere which
celebrated Kardeş Türküler, Fuat Saka, Koma Amed, etc., Kazım Koyuncu launched his
album, Viya in 2001 and Hayde in 2004 again with Metropol Music.
Even though Koyuncu was popular amongst a small intellectual, counter-
cultural, middle class consisting of different cultural groups living in urban settings, his
fame became nation-wide when he appeared as the musical director of the soap opera
Gülbeyaz in 2002.250 Even though most of his songs were in Turkish, and from the
characters to the storyline the soap opera was highly cliché in terms of Laz stereotype,
Koyuncu’s ‘Lazness’ became prominent nationwide. Consistent amongst all of my
informants, it is significant that they consider Kazım Koyuncu’s popularity “a turning
point for the representation of the Laz”.
Koyuncu’s fame doubled and he was turned into a legend after his early death at
the age of 33 in 2005 because of lung cancer.251 The way he died symbolized and was
attached to the fate of people from the Black Sea who face cancer due to environmental
poisons resulting from the Chernobyl accident. This accident was to be updated by the
ecologists through the death of Kazım Koyuncu. His funeral was very crowded and the
ceremony eventually turned into a demonstration of different groups that he was
249 Old Minister of Foreign Affairs İsmail Cem was showing off to his Sweedish collegue by taking her some albums launched in Turkey from different ethnic languages before the anouncement of EU candidates in Helsinki. That was meant to demonstrate the freedom on the ethnic cultures in Turkey. ‘Helsinki’ye Kardeş Türküler’, Miliyet Gazetesi, 26. 12. 1999
250 Kazım Koyuncu'ya Üzülüyoruz, Rock'n Roll Kültür Mecmuası - 27 May 2005
251 We can see his poster everywhere attached with Black Sea as well as Laz. In a soap opera, on the display of the Laz café (Benim Annem Bir Melek, Kanal D), A Laz association Sima, Trabzon hometown Association in Istanbul, etc.
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attached with: the Laz, the Black Sea community, the leftists, the anarchists, the
ecologists, Kurds, Trabzonspor fans, and more.
The reasons that had turned Kazım Koyuncu into a phenomenon actually vary.
First of all, having had personal contact with him, I must mention his personality and
charisma that influenced all people, not just his fans. Tanıl Bora refers to the ‘sincerity’
that he had which is so scarce in show business.252 Mine Kalaycı, one of the provisional
vocals of his group, tells of how impressive his performance was onstage--often
emotional and always highly energetic. “Before the concerts, he used to say ‘we first
should enjoy this, then the audience will enjoy it’”.253
Koyuncu’s popularity revealed that, somehow, he managed to reach many people
from different cultural and political circles. Even though politically and musically his
performances were not as hard as Zugaşi Berepe’s were254, he still declared his political
stance as a ‘leftist’, sometimes ‘anarchist’, ‘revolutionary’ at every opportunity. “I am a
leftist person. Generally speaking, it means standing by the subalterns, the poor, and the
252 Tanıl Bora, “Ümit Kıvanç'ın Kazım Koyuncu Belgeseli - Şarkılarla Geçtim Aranızdan: Bir Kıt Kaynak Olarak Samimiyet”, İletişim Yayınları V.227, March 2008
253 Interview with Mine Kalaycı in May 2010
254The reporter: Why did you orient to folk music from rock?
Kazım Koyunucu: I was a rocker who listened to rock music, wearing torn trousers looking like a vagrant. Mehmet Ali Barış Beşli was missioned for the revitalization of the Laz language. He insisted on founding the group Zuğaşi Berepe. My aim was different. But once I involved in, I realized the magical aspects, the village, my childhood, the grape vines… Until the year of 1998, we launched two albums. Once I started to my solo career, we can say that I became coherent to the system. (He laughs).
Gazeteci: Lazca sözlü rock müzik yaparken neden folk müziğe döndünüz? Kazım Koyuncu: Rock müzik dinleyen, yırtık pantolonla dolaşan serseri görünümlü rocker'dım. Mehmedali Barış Beşli de Lazcanın yaşaması misyonunu üstlenmişti ve Zuğaşi Berepe'yi kurmamız için ısrar etti. Amacım farklıydı. Ama işin içine girince büyülü taraflarını görmeye başlıyorsun. Köy, çocukluğum, asmalar... 1998 yılına kadar iki albüm yaptık grupla. Solo kariyerime başlayınca sistemle uyumlu hale geldiğim söylenebilir (gülüyor). “İnsan Yaşamak İstiyor”, Sabah Gazetesi - 04 May 2005
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proletarians. One step further, my leftism is close to anarchism in terms of aesthetics.”255
Koyuncu was, however reluctant to articulate his point of view on concrete political
issues unless questioned.256 I found his polical stance to be ‘humanist’ referring to
‘antimilitarism’257, ‘peace’, ‘freedom’,258 ‘equality’ ‘fraternity’259 etc. The stress on
‘political matters’ shifted from ‘identity politics’ to ‘environmentalism’, which was
much more akin to popularization.260 Koyuncu’s sympathy for Trabzonspor also linked
him to the dominant culture through football and its attachments with nationalism and
male culture.261 Therefore, I claim that his profile was moderate enough for the national
media to employ. I believe that, besides everything, his authenticity was embedded in
the way he expressed his life philosophy, as extremely poetic.
Stoeltje and Bauman suggest that “time takes on another dimension during the
performance itself when the past, the present and implications or the future can confront
255 “Solcu bir insanım. Genel anlamda solculuğun anlamı da, ezilenlerin, yoksulların, emeğiyle hayatta kalmaya çalışanların yanında olmak. Solculuğumun bir adım ötesi de, estetik anlamda anarşizme daha yakın bir duruştur.” Trabzonspor Dergisi - 10 May 2004
256 In his interview with the leftist magazine Kaldıraç he was advocating that demanding cultural rights is a political stance which is crucial for the cultural groups to survive but against of the idea of a ‘new state’, ’new boundaries’. “However everyone is free to do whatever they want.” Kaldıraç, 2000
257 Koyuncu performed in the demonstration of World Conscientious Objection Day (Dünya Vicdani Retçiler Günü) on 15 May 2003 http://www.savaskarsitlari.org/arsiv.asp?ArsivTipID=5&ArsivAnaID=14024
258 “He was wishing for a free world in peace” “Barış içinde özgür bir dünya dilekleriyle…’ Polifoni.net - 26 Haziran 2005
259 His words of ‘I brought the greetings from the ‘children of the sea’ to the ‘children of the mountains’ (Denizin çocuklarından dağların çocuklarıa selam getirdim) when they were on a concert in Diyarbakır, were then turned to be a symbol of his sense of fraternity. “Asi yürek: Kazım Koyuncu” http://www.yuksekovahaber.com/haber/asi-yurek-kazim-koyuncu--32743.htm
260 Ayşenur Kolivar, “Kentli Bir Yerel Kimlik Temsili Olarak Karadeniz Rock”, Müzikte Temsil Ve Müziksel Temsil II Sempozyumu, 20 October 2010
261 Trabzonspor Dergisi - 10 May 2004
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each other. Cultural performances build themselves out of tradition, the known and the
familiar linking the present and the past, yet the new and different must be integrated as
well to ensure fascination and excitement. Moreover, cultural performance provides a
time to acknowledge and reflect upon social states and conditions and the opportunity to
create new relationships.” 262 For many, Kazım Koyuncu played a crucial role in a
perception change from ‘primitive’, ‘introverted’, ‘irritating’.263 Black Sea music to a
‘pleasant’, ‘modern’ and ‘inviting’ music.264 I think he managed to do that by linking the
‘modern’ with the ‘traditional’.265 Therefore, the instruments played a symbolic role
rather than mere musical instruments. Once the perception of music changed from an
unpleasant to a pleasant one, the sense of identity of the Laz and the Black Sea was
inevitably changed and transformed to a ‘desired’ one. The dream of Laz intellectuals
was not only a renovation of the music but also of the identity. Here, we can obviously
observe how performances are important to “mark or change” identity. 266
Koyuncu’s music was frequently said to be widening from ‘traditional’ to
‘universal’.267 I interpret the term ‘universal’ here as referring to ‘consumability’ by a
wide mass throughout the ‘nation’, while the music is defined as ‘world music’. I found
262 Cited in Beverly J. Stoeltje and Richard Bauman, ‘The Semiotics of Folkloric Performance’ in Semiotic Web 1987, Mouton de Gruyter,Berlin, New York and Amsterdam, 1988, p. 592
263 “Kazım Koyuncu'ya Üzülüyoruz”,Rock'n roll Kültür Mecmuası - 27 May 2005
264 “Viya: Müsekkin Niyetine...” Aslı Atasoy, Radikal Gazetesi - 28 August 2001
265 I would like to emphasize here that I don’t accept those concepts as taken for granted. For example, when we look at İsmail Türüt, his music is rather mixture of modern and traditional too using organ, electro-bağlama etc. But this hybridity do not cause to a ‘modern’ context now but maybe in the 1980s.
266 Richard Schechner, Performance Studies, Routledge,2002, p. 46
267 “Koyuncu’dan Horona Davet”, Ercan Çelik, Radikal 04 April 2004
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this quite contradictory because as much as this music is defined as ‘global’, it is defined
as ‘inappropriate to the norms of the music market’(piyasa)268at the same time. On one
hand, the music market’s norms were looked down upon and found inappropriate by the
‘revolutionary’ political stance; on the other hand, the potential of the music to be
circulated around the world was praised. Moreover, the above differentiation also
assumes that ‘popular art’ is always ‘low art’ in contrast with Meral Özbek’s point of
view who suggests that popular music might also be valuable in terms of musicality and
may include a sort of resistance discourse within,269 pretty much similar to Hall’s
argument: ‘just as musical performance enacts and embodies dominant communal
values, it can also enact in a powerful, affective way, rival principles of social
organization. 270
When I evaluate the ‘performance’ as a whole, (from musicality to narrative
discourses) I suggest that there are resistant, challenging and mainstream aspects of
Kazım Koyuncu as a phenomenon. On the one hand, he was opening up a space for the
representation of an ‘invisible’ community, Laz through a new hybrid musical form. On
the other hand, he was not marginalized but became popular among different social
groups. I arrive at this conclusion through several facts. First of all, he was Laz, but his
Lazness was not ‘demanding’ apart from the recognition of the Laz language. Put it in
other words, his cultural identity claim could be considered ‘moderate’.
268 Interview with Kazım Koyuncu by Ebru Drew Vatan Gazetesi 18 April 2004
269 Özbek, Meral, Popüler Kültür ve Orhan Gencebay Arabeski, İletişim Yayınları, Istanbul, 1991
270 Stuart Hall and T. Jefferson (eds.) Resistance Through Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Postwar Britain, London, Hutchinson, 1976 Cited in Martin Stokes, 1994, p. 13
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When I am referring to my Lazness, I don’t mean a nationalist point. I can’t consider myself to be as fool as to be a (Laz) nationalist. I advocate everyone to express his/herself independently, let everyone sing his/her song…271
Secondly, from his fluent Turkish accent272 to his urbane manner, from his
gestures to his shabby rocker appearance, he was an urban-dweller who had adapted to
urban life successfully.273 His performances did not work to dig up the painful memory
of the Laz. Rather, he was a good example of integration that Laz youth could identify
with. In short, part of the reason for his success was the marketability of his `Lazness'
throughout the nation due to his ability to slot into a widespread definition of ‘Lazness’
as mystical274 and spiritual. Moreover, his Lazness turned into ‘Blackseaness’. Even so,
this was not his primary concern275- he focused first and foremost on being a
‘revolutionary musician’ and this opposition rather associated with the
environmentalism instead of identity politics.276
271 “Lazlığımdan bahsederken miliyetçi bir noktayı kastetmiyorum. Milliyetçi olacak kadar salak bir insan olma ihtimalini hiç görmüyorum kendimde. Herkesin kendi ifade etme özgürlüğünü savunuyorum, herkes şarkısını türküsünü söylesin…” Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, “N3aşa Exti” Roll, V. 99, July, 2005
272 Interview with Kazım Koyuncu by Ebru Drew Vatan Gazetesi 18April 2004
273 One of the reporter was saying that “from your hair to your dressing you don’t look like a Black Sea guy.” Interview with Kazım Koyuncu by Ebru Drew, Vatan Gazetesi 18 April .2004
274 I use the term “mystic” in the meaning of “hidden”, “untouched”, “incomprehensible” and “irrational”.
275 This reminds me an article’s heading: ‘Turkish Leftists Do Not Have Ethnic Identity Problem, Rather They are from the World . Yelda, “Türk Solcularının Etnik Kimilik Sorunu Yoktur, Onlar Dünyalıdır”, Birikim Aylık Sosyalist Kültür Dergisi, ‘Etnik Kimlik ve Azınlıklar’ Özel Sayı, V. 71-72, March- April, 1995
276 “Ben bir müzisyenim, ondan sonra biraz Karadenizliyim, ama hepsinin ötesinde ben bir devrimciyim.” “Denizin Çocuğu Giderken Çernobil Sorumsuzluğuna İsyan Başlattı”, Hatice Tuncer - Cumhuriyet Gazetesi -03.07.2005
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The most popular song277 that Kazım Koyuncu performed was Didou Nana.
This song was known as a Laz song in the Megrelian dialect of Laz, far different than
the one spoken in Turkey and by the Georgian border. Interestingly, a song representing
the Laz was pretty much incomprehensible for the Laz in Turkey. The song was first
performed by Birol Topaloğlu in ‘Heyamo’ album but rearranged by Kazım Koyuncu.
Apparently, making it move faster made it more popular.278 That demonstrates how the
effect of the same song can be different when the form is changed.
Even though Koyuncu’s music has not circulated around the international world
music market yet --apart from the migrant communities living abroad- his music fits the
definition of ‘World Music’ well: “exotic spiritualism and a distinctive, yet accessible
musical style from a unique and distant locality”.279 The multilingual lyrics, the
unsophisticated tulum and kemençe, and unfamiliar rhythmic structure (5/8 and 7/8 bits)
gives the music its ‘distinctive spiritualism’. On the other hand, songs with absurd
Turkish lyrics, the pop-rock sound keeps the music familiar at the same time as well as
Koyuncu’s well communicating subjectivity.
Stuart Hall asserts that, “the Diaspora experience is defined, not by essence or
purity, but by the recognition of a necessary heterogeneity and diversity by a conception
277 The song memorized even at a ‘distinct’ town Kızılkaya in Mardin. It was so impressive to see a crowd of 80.000 Kurds accompanying the song Didou Nana, when we performed in a festival with my band. At that moment, I had the chance to observe how music and performance was so powerful in terms of communication and obviously Koyuncu’s case was a successful example of communication going beyond linguistic obstacles. His fame in the Kurd region was not because of media only but also his live performances. As he staged on many festivals in the South East, he had many fans too.
278 The song became so popular that it was rearranged by Volkan Konak with Turkish lyrics and Ayhan Alptekin with Laz in Ardeşen dialect.
279 John Connell and Chris Gibson, “World music: Deterritorializing Place and Identity”, Progress in Human Geography V. 28,3, 2004, p. 342 -361
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of “identity” which lives with and through, not despite difference; by hybridity.”280
Thus, I do not assume its existence in pure, authentic forms when I refer to Laz or Black
Sea music here. For example, Birol Topaloğlu, though well-known as a performer of
‘authentic- traditional’281 Laz music, performs highly hybrid music. His performances
are also inspired from different musical traditions elsewhere in the world and include
instruments such as the didgeridoo (from Australia) or a tabla (from India) next to the
tulum in his concert performances. As some degree of hybridity was central to all kind
of world music, this music can be considered neither Laz music, nor rock music but a
hybrid form called ‘Black Sea Rock Music”.
As a critique of Adorno, 282 who claims that all popular music at some point
involves a ‘standardization’, Nedim Karakayalı suggests that popular music is more
complicated than simply a ‘standardization’. He claims that we expect popular musical
genres to have ‘familiarity’ and at the same time ‘authenticity’283. I accept the concept of
‘authenticity’ here as similar to Ayhan Erol’s: an attempt to embrace a musical genre,
tune, style from the past and at the same time rejecting some old musical styles and as a
consequence constructing a new musical genre by conjoining the one in the present with
280 Stuart Hall, "Cultural Identity and Diaspora", Identity: Community, Culture, Difference, Ed. Jonathan Rutherford, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1990, p. 235
281 Kazım Koyuncu was referring to the authenticity of Birol Topaloğlu’s music too, supposing that he was performing ‘pure’ Laz music in contrast with himself. “Etnik Üstü Az Modern”, Evrensel Gazetesi - 31 August 2001
282 “Essays On Popular Music”, Studies in Philosophy and Social Science, Institute of Social Research, New York, 1941, p. 438 & p. 443
283 Nedim Karakayalı, Doğarken Ölen: Hafif Müzik Ortamında Ciddi Bir Proje Olarak Orhan Gencebay, Toplum ve Bilim, V. 67, 1995, p. 142-143
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new musical styles.284 In this respect the authenticity of Kazım Koyuncu’s music on the
one hand embraces Laz/Black Sea tunes and on the other harmonizes them with urban
instruments and musical styles which move his music in the direction of the common
representation of Black Sea music that was performed by musicians such as İsmail
Türüt, Mustafa Topaloğlu and Davut Güloğlu.
Stokes stresses that, “the dominant culture, through the music industry and
media, attempts to re-appropriate the space for its own purposes. The moment it does
this, new stylistic criteria for articulating an inflected ‘difference’ vis-à-vis the dominant
culture are found by the subcultural group.”285 Therefore, I assume that the music that
Kazım performed until his last days was the product of the music market and the
dominant culture conjoining with the Black Sea community’s cultural needs.
After Koyuncu’s tragic death, People’s Houses (Halkevleri) adopted the
copyright of some of his unpublished works (most of them were in Turkish and not in
Black Sea musical characteristics) and some live concert recordings, and launched them
as a new album. 286 Once the album was launched, the income was donated for founding
a cultural center with Kazım Koyuncu’s name to provide free musical education and
other services for the youth. This simply demonstrates that his political attitude was
compatible with the Halkevleri emphasizing his revolutionary stance over his Lazness.
On the other hand, I interpret the musical style of the unpublished recordings rather
different from Koyucu’s popular musical style.
284 Ayhan Erol, Popüler Müzikte Otantisite, Toplum ve Bilim, V. 106, 2006, p. 197
285 Martin Stokes, “Introduction”, Ethnicity,Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place, Martin Stokes (Ed), Oxford/NY: Berg, 1994, p.19
286 Şarkılarla Geçtim Aranızdan, January 2007
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Interestingly, Kazım Koyuncu’s popularity reached the Laz community much
later. Actually, only after his death, he turned into an icon within the Laz community, as
he was complaining about this fact earlier. When a reporter asks about the reactions of
the Laz towards his music:
I think they would be much happy if I performed in Turkish. Laz people are interesting. (…) Our audience is by majority non-Laz intellectuals. (…) If I performed in Turkish, or a non-sense popular stuff they would welcome enthusiastically. But now, they say ‘How nice, he is an artist from our hometown Hopa’.287
Black Sea is the place I was born, no doubt, I will be buried there too. But, we will start our tournament from Diyarbakır. I gave many jolly concerts there. Even sometimes they embraced me more than Black Sea people. So it is a significant place to start by. 288
One of his colleagues said:
For example, Kazım Koyuncu was not popular in Black Sea as much as in the East. On the contrary, he was very popular there. Our Kurdish brothers and sisters used to listen to him.289
We can say that even Koyuncu’s frequent ‘visits’ to the ‘East’ did not
marginalize him. For example, while there is no legal obstacle, we can hardly ever listen
287 “Sanırım Türkçe müzik yapsam çok daha mutlu olurlardı. Lazlar enteresandır. Daha çok Laz olmayan, aydın bir kesim bizim müziğimizle ilgileniyordu. Fakat Türkçe yapsaydım, hatta popüler ya da saçma sapan bir şeyler yapsaydım, belki daha coşkuyla karşılarlardı. Şimdi ise "A, iyi, bizim Hopalı sanatçımız" diyorlar. “ http://www.studyoimge.com/makale/986/kazim-koyuncu-yla-soylesi
288 “Karadeniz doğduğum yer, şüphesiz ölünce de gömüleceğim. Ama turneye Diyarbakır'dan başlayacağız. Diyarbakır'da daha önce çok keyifli konserler vermiştim. Yeri geldi, beni Karadenizliler'den daha fazla sahiplendiler. Önemli bir başlangıç noktası benim için.” Interview with Kazım Koyuncu by Ebru Drew, Vatan Gazetesi 18 April 2004
289 “Mesela Kazım Koyuncu Karadeniz'de doğuda olduğu kadar popüler değildi. Tam aksine Doğu'da çok popülerdi. Kürt dostlarımız kardeşlerimiz çok dinlerdi. “ Asi yürek: Kazım Koyuncu http://www.yuksekovahaber.com/haber/asi-yurek-kazim-koyuncu--32743.htm
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to a song in other ethnic languages290 –I put the TRT Şeş in a different context- but
Kazım Koyuncu’s videos. There might be several reasons for that but I think one of the
reasons might be because of his ‘distance’ to the Kurdish audience. Let me elaborate my
conceptualization with an anecdote. As far as I know, on one of his performances in the
region, the audience demanded a Kurdish song. However, he rejected this demand by
saying “accept me as a Laz. Consider me as a Laz and a friend’.291 To elaborate, let me
give an opposite stance where I interpret Birol Topaloğlu’s performances of singing a
Kurdish song in the accompany of kemençe in a Newroz292 fest, or performing destans
on the same stage with Kurdish dengbejs is rather opposite of Kazım Koyuncu’s position
of no interaction, ‘neutralism’ in a way.
I interpret the Kurdish audience’s embrace of Kazım Koyuncu as an effort to
position him in the same disadvantaged side though, disclosing the denial of the
multicultural structure of the country which claimed the population as homogeneous
with a single shared identity. On the other hand, I suppose Kazım Koyuncu interpreted
his popularity as a consequence of the ‘recognition’ of Kurdish identity by ‘visiting’
them. I do not mean to say that he was looking down on them- that would be incorrect,
but I would like to underline the ‘distance’ again.
As I mentioned at the beginning, I suggest that Kazım Koyuncu became a
phenomenon not primarily because he was performing for the Laz, but for the ‘others’.
290 Burcu Yıldız, ‘Türkiye’de Popüler Müzik ve Çokkültürlülük Üzerine Notlar…’ 3 January 2009 http://www.bgst.org/muzik/yazilar/popmuzik_cokkulturluluk.asp
291 “Beni Laz olarak kabul et, bir Laz ve bir dost olarak kabul et”' quotation by Mehmedali Barış Beşli . Asi Yürek Kazım Koyuncu http://www.yuksekovahaber.com/haber/asi-yurek-kazim-koyuncu--32743.htm
292 A Kurdish traditional spring festival.
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But, despite the identification of the second generation Laz and Black Sea migrants, the
more his fame circulated around the nation, the more the Laz and Black Sea community
eventually embraced his legend.
Authenticity of ‘Black Sea Rock’ Music
Apart from his contribution to the ‘visibility’ of the Laz himself, as well as
changing the pejorative perception of the Laz identity, Kazım Koyuncu set an example
with his popularity for the Laz youth, as well as youth from other Black Sea origins,
especially after his death. The music he made eventually turned into a genre as ‘Black
Sea Rock’ music with bands following him after his death.293 The legacy of Koyuncu
was insomuch influential that some were involved with this music without knowing
anything about Laz music themselves.294
While focusing on the extrinsic aspects of the performance, one should not
ignore the intrinsic, aesthetic aspects of it assuming that “the very notions of the
aesthetics were themselves historically constructed and productive of the meanings that
293 Through the interviews with the representatives of these bands, Ayşenur Kolivar suggests that not only the fact that Kazım Koyuncu became an icon for them but also it revealed that Koyuncu himself encouraged those youngsters with personal contacts to perform Black Sea music. (Ayşenur Kolivar, “Kentli Bir Yerel Kimlik Temsili Olarak Karadeniz Rock, Müzikte Temsil ve Müziksel Temsil II Sempozyumu”20 October 2010)
294 Erdal Bayrakoğlu was saying that once he prepared to launch the album, he didn’t know anything about Laz music at all. “I arranged the songs, prepared the notations but when it came to ask the tulum to play, he couldn’t because our compositions were not appripriate for the tulum’s characterstic, having only five notes.” Interview with Erdal Bayrakoğlu, from the archive of Ayşenur Kolivar, 19 May 2009, Istanbul
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had wider social and political implications”.295 We can define the music of Kazım
Koyuncu and the ‘Black Sea Rock’ music as re-arranged traditional multi-lingual songs
(very few compositions) from the Black Sea region, with traditional instruments like
tulum, kemençe, kaval, and accordion as well as classical pop-rock instruments like
drums, classical guitar, electro-guitar, bass guitar, and sometimes flute and violin. Since
the music engages the body through rhythm, 296 and can be classified as entertainment, it
can be considered popular music from Adorno’s perspective which defines the popular
music as either ‘rhythmically obedient’ or ‘emotional’297.
Despite the numerous bands and performers,298 I would like to dwell on the
common characteristics of their performances and especially the characteristic of
‘entertainment’. Horon has been as important as the musical performances in that
attendees often went to concerts merely for the horon.299 Similar to tragic dramas which
began as a ritual performed in religious festivals during the epoch of the tragedians
Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides then turned into mere performances, the position of
the horon has shifted from ritual to performance.300 The main reason for this change is
embedded in the notion of ‘context’. That is to say, while there was a social context of
295 Bedirhan Dehmen, Appropriations of Folk Dance at the Intersection of the National and the Global : Sultans of the Dance, Unpublished M.A Thesis, Bogazici University, 2003, p.105
296 Theodor Adorno “Essays On Popular Music”, Studies in Philosophy and Social Science, Institute of Social Research, New York, 1941, p.440 & p. 445- 449
297 ibid, p. 460
298 At least ten bands founded after his death: Gurgula, Nena, Marsis, Empula, Ezmoce, Karmate, Feluka, Erdal Bayrakoğlu, Filiz İlkay Balta etc.
299 Kolbastı has been also popular and even turned into a phenomenon in the last couple of years but I will not dwell on here as it should be investigated on its own.
300 Richard Schechner, Performance Studies, Routledge, 2002, p. 39
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the horon in the traditional, rural context, in an urban setting horon can take place
almost anywhere and anytime. Moreover, the form of horon changed301 aesthetically as
well as its subjects and norms. Nowadays, the youngsters dance horon more than elders
as it was the case in the last decades. Furthermore, there are now woman tulum players
as well as horon conductors.
The music critic Murat Meriç criticizes those musicians for distinguishing this
musical genre from Anatolian Rock as having no originality but merely mimicking
Kazım Koyuncu. There is actually such a common impression about the albums and
performances of those bands after Koyuncu. Even most of the soloists were accused or
praised for mimicking him.302 Erdal Bayrakoğlu admitted this: “We all attempt to mimic
him, even out of our will, we inherited a lot from him anyway.” Moreover, he
emphasizes on the repetition of the same musical structure even the repertoire and how
the music industry forces to produce the same kind of music but does not allow you to
make any difference.303
While the audience’s profile is varied, they were mostly young people of the
second generation of Black Sea immigrants in big cities ranging in age between 15 to
35. The audience should not be imagined as passive recipients but rather active in terms
of contributing to the performance with dance and maintaining the repertoire.
301 Avcı tells how the youngsters exaggerate the horon figures as it now turned to a show nowadays. The interview with İsmail Avcı, from the archive of BGST (Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu) 2009.
302 “Karadeniz’de rock çağı”, 12 October 2006, Taraf
303 Interview with Interview with Erdal Bayrakoğlu, from the archive of Ayşenur Kolivar, 19 May 2009, Istanbul
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In all of the performances I attended, I felt the tension that derived from the
expectations of the audience for rhythm in high bits to be able to dance. This kind of
music was expected to entertain more than anything else. Erdal Bayrakoğlu mentions
this pressure, “even though we prepared a repertoire before the concerts thanks to the
song proposals from the audience, you end up merely entertaining them. You are
identified with ‘entertainer’ as a Laz band.”304 This comment gives the impression of the
Gypsy stereotype which is similarly identified.
On the other hand, Hikmet Akçiçek who performs Hemşin music with his group
Vova known with its ‘calm’ musicality mentions this tension even though they do not
care. Another member of Vova, Mustafa Biber says, “We have rhythmic songs actually,
we could have arranged them in even faster bits but we rather perform them in our own
way.”305 Let me share another example from a different case. On her first live
performance, Filiz Ilkay Balta, one of the rare woman tulum players, changed the order
of her repertoire after three songs during the concert feeling tense expectation from the
audience and started playing rhythmic songs instead of slow ones.306
“The performance environment or space is also essential” 307 for investigating for
a better understanding of the performances. I would like to stress how performances
transform the performance places more so than other rock or pop bands do. First of all,
the ‘cool’ performance halls like Balans, Studio Live, Jazz Stop, Babylon, etc.,
304 Interview with Erdal Bayrakoğlu, from the archive of Ayşenur Kolivar, 19 May 2009, İstanbul
305Interview with Vova, “Bu Dünya Soğuyacak”, Roll ( Date uncertain)
306 25 December 2009, Studio Live, Taksim
307 Beverly J. Stoeltje and Richard Bauman, ‘The Semiotics of Folkloric Performance’ in The Semiotic Web 1987, Mouton de Gruyter,Berlin, New York and Amsterdam, 1988, p. 592
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previously only featuring ‘universal’ Turkish or Western pop/rock music, opened their
doors to ‘local/country’ music in order to make a profit; in other words, they had to
recognize them. 308 The ideal performance hall was one having a square or round stage
for the audience to join in dancing the horon. The performance locations are usually
chosen according to their suitability for both music and dance. Thus, places like
conference halls were not acceptable for participants. Moreover, the limits of the
location was always exceeded and the entertainment carried beyond to the halls and the
street. This extension was perceived as the peak moment of the entertainment.
Music and Politics in the Twenty First Century Turkey
According to the multicultural discourse which appeared in the 2000s, it was
accepted that the country consists of different ethnic groups having distinct cultures
from each other. This became obvious as communication was highly democratized with
the use of the Internet, etc. In other words, there was no possible option for the state but
to accept this simple truth. Under these circumstances, the ‘mosaics’ discourse was then
articulated by the state in order to maintain its power and legitimacy according to the
new governmental technologies.
The mosaics discourse was built on flattering the cultural resourcefulness of
Anatolian heritages from the Ottoman Empire, accepting the multicultural structure of
308 In 2007, when we went to Balans in order to organize a horon dance night, we hesitated at the beginning not knowing how our demand was going to be perceived, the musical director greeting our proposal pleasantly admitted that ‘since Kazım, this (Black Sea Rock) music turned into an important genre and thus we welcome such organizations”.
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the society but in the condition of hierarchical order with the Turkish culture (dominant
culture vs. subculture) without any interaction with each other.309 Accepting the
representations of the ethnic groups themselves at some point this mosaics discourse,
however, requires a superficial way of representation having no affiliation with history
and politics. In Turkey’s praxis of multiculturalism, I suggest that the history and
politics were highly suppressed by legitimizing the multi-lingual music. In the end, the
communities who were allowed to perform their songs in their mother tongue were
expected to be satisfied with the provision of the exclusive cultural policies so far. That
roughly meant, in the hegemonic discourse, “don’t tell me whatever I did to you in the
history to assimilate you, and don’t remind me of the pains I caused. Just sing your
songs now and forget the past.”
Robert Spam criticizes this perspective by saying, “I am not suggesting that
multiculturalism is simply ‘fun’, a culinary delight where one wanders from a falafel one
week to sushi next, with salsa dancing on Friday night and samba Saturday”. He
mentions that “any substantive multiculturalism has to recognize the political realities of
injustice and inequality and the consequent existential realities of pain, anger and
resentment, since the multiple cultures invoked by term ‘multiculturalism’ have not
historically coexisted in relations of equality and mutual respect.”310
309 Burcu Yıldız, ‘Türkiye’de Popüler Müzik ve Çokkültürlülük Üzerine Notlar…’ 3 January 2009 http://www.bgst.org/muzik/yazilar/popmuzik_cokkulturluluk.asp
310 Robert Spam, “Multiculturalism and the Neoconservatives” in Dangerous Liaisons Gender and Postcolonial Perspectives, Anne McClintock, Aamir Mufti, and Ella Shohat, eds. Cultural Politics, University of Minnesota Press, v. 11, 1997, p.200 Cited in Melissa Bilal, “The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey”, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, 2004, p. 17
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Indeed, the majority of Laz were satisfied with this favor, unlike Kurds and
Armenians who demanded that the state face up to the historical mistakes and the pain it
caused. Moreover, Kurds were rather demanding about their cultural rights such as
education in Kurdish and regional autonomy. The majority of the Laz were already
reluctant to position themselves as a ‘subaltern’311 group, and wished only to be
‘visible’ in the public sphere apart from the previous common stereotype. To put it other
words, the recognition of cultural difference was acceptable as long as it is positioned as
high(er than Kurds) but at the same time within the dominant Turkish culture. In
practical terms, this means that they tended to define Lazness as a ‘subculture’ group
with distinct cultural characteristics but still within the larger culture.312
In the next step, I will suggest that through musical performance the Laz present
an acceptable ‘locality’ that can be ‘consumed’. The consumption was not only through
the album sales and concerts but also material via accessories (scarves having particular
texture from Black Sea) and mobile phone tunes, etc. The first generation had not
experienced the production of the Laz identity though consuming cultural products, but
learned it from the second generation. 313
311 In contrast with the above definition, the chief of RIDEV (The Federation of the Associations of Rize) who is from Laz origin, declared that ‘Laz has never been a subculture, but always been in the dominant one”. Meeting in RIDEV, in 2008 May. Similarly, in the horon event of Laz Culture and Solidarity Association, in İstanbul in November 2010, once the chief mentioned the assimilation policies of the nation state on Laz culture during the opening speech, there were murmurings among the attendants claiming that the Laz were not suppressed at all. A woman even reminded of ‘our Laz’ Prime Minister as a proof.
312 I differentiate the position of the Kurds, Armenians, Greeks who considered themselves as oppressed by the state while having distinct cultural characteristics without linking them to the dominant culture.
313 The younger members of the family organize going to a concert or buying albums, downloading tulum tunes for their mobile phones from the Internet for their parents.
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In addition to the above, a secluded culture became apprehensible moderately by
‘singing their songs and not demanding more’. In that way the Laz were under control
when they were visible in the public sphere from the prism of the ‘panopticon’.
However, the limits of the public sphere are cloudy. That is to say, the Laz language
may exist only in a musical form in a concert hall, but not in a state office, and not on
TV. For example, while I was working for a festival organization in Rize, we were
supposed to write the Turkish names of the villages in a petition even though they were
not in use within the public, writing the festival leaflet in the Laz language was not even
imaginable. Similarly, the Laz language was not allowed as a state broadcasting
language.314
The revival of ethnic cultures is taking place by fetishizing ‘the cultural heritage
of Turkey’ only in particular ways. Renato Rosaldo calls this an ‘imperialist nostalgia’,
in other words, ‘mourning over what one has destroyed. When the monolithic cultural
discourse lost its power of persuasion, people started to search for the hints of different
cultural groups. Rosaldo says that, “in any of its versions, imperialist nostalgia uses a
pose of ‘innocent yearning’ both to capture people’s imaginations and to conceal its
complicity with often brutal domination.315 I consider this musical genre as nostalgia of
the Laz language, which is supposed dead. Such an apolitical music was obviously cut
out for the music industry.
314 “Turkish state television’s new Kurdish channel will not be followed by similar channels in Laz, Georgian or other languages spoken in Turkey, or by a channel broadcasting in Zazaki, a Kurdish dialect, said the state minister responsible for Turkish Radio and Television Corporation, or TRT, Mehmet Aydın yesterday.” Hurriyet Daily News, 5 February 2009
315 Renato Rosaldo, “Imperialist Nostalgia” in Culture and Truth: The remarking of Social Analysis, Beacon Pres: Boston, 1992, p. 69-70
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In short, despite the fact that the ‘denial’ of the multicultural population in
Turkey, the cultural policies has not been transformed to a real ‘recognition’ and
intention to keep alive those cultural differences considering the inefficient legal
changes in the constitution. Moreover, claiming cultural rights in order to sustain
cultural values is still controversial and has not gained its legitimacy yet in Turkey.
Thus, we are far away from the ‘multicultural’ society for the present in the lack of a
legal and social reform.
The Function and the Limits of the Multilingual Repertoire
When we look at the performances in general, there is always an “assumption of
responsibility to an audience for a display of communicative skill”. 316 A particular
performance will communicate different information to a human audience, and this
information will vary depending on who the viewer is. 317 As all the performances being
in the city inevitably means facing a foreign audience at some point, I can reflect on the
tension involved in appropriating the repertoire arranged in the eye of ‘other’ from
personal experience.
When we look at the repertoires of the bands that perform ‘Black Sea’ music
particularly, they are more or less all multilingual (Laz, Turkish, Hemşin, Georgian,
316 Marvin Carlson, 1996, Performance: A Critical Introduction, Routledge, p. 14
317 Adrienne L. Kaeppler, ‘Dance’ in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p.197
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Megrelian) while giving the Laz language a place of prominence.318 However, the
repertoires were expected to have ‘balance’ in terms of languages. My music band
Dalepe Nena deals with this issue by putting the songs in order, not placing too many
Laz songs one after another and putting a few Turkish songs in the repertoire in order to
provide some familiarity for the audience. That tension can also be interpreted as
performing in the eye of the other—assuming that not being capable of understanding
the lyrics would cause boredom or concern about whether the content of the lyrics may
be politically ‘unfavorable.’
Multi-lingual performances served to soften any political appearance.319 The
multilingual repertoire suggests that, “I have no separatist intentions, I care about my
identity just as much as his or hers”. This helps performers avoid stigmatization as
micro-nationalists. Therefore, the emphasis here is on ‘similarity’, not difference. That is
to say, all the Black Sea languages and consequently the cultures may be substituted for
each other at the expense of isolating nationalist reflections either from the Black Sea
community or the Turkish.
The way, the ‘multi-lingualism’ was used was different for Zuğaşi Berepe
though. In their case, the motivation of performing a few Hemşin songs along with Laz,
was the intended “contribution to the peace between Laz - Hemşin historical conflict”.320
318 Most of the soloists are Laz originated and names of the bands are usually in Laz such as Nena, Gurgula, Karmate, Marsis, Empula…
319 As an example of such a perception, I would like to mention the Turkish Republic’s 75th anniversary celebrations, where a Laz song ‘Heyamo’ performed where no other ethnic languages took place in the show except Turkish.
320 Zuğaşi Berepe, “Görmeyelim, Duymayalım, Lazona’da Lazca Konuşulmadığını”, Roll. (Date uncertain)
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What I would like to underline is the emergence of the ‘historicality’ here, compared
with the commensurability of the languages in the contemporary musicians’
performances.
Furthermore, the fusion of the cultures of the Black Sea, under the genre ‘Black
Sea Rock Music’ is very likely to be related to the music markets besides politics. The
market attempted to gather all the ethnic groups together by addressing all of them
through the multi-lingual repertoires supposing that they wouldn’t constitute large
enough market demand individually.321
What attracts my attention is the frequent exclusion of Pontic Greek from the
repertoires, which I found out was probably because the stigmatized position of the
language and suspected imperialist conspiracy theories of the Greeks. I was once in a
meeting with almost all the representatives of the ‘Black Sea music’ bands attended, a
guy from Trabzon commanding Pontic Greek as well as Turkish, asked everyone why
they did not perform in this language. There were a few answers claiming that they were
not familiar with this language so rather not to perform instead of misarticulating. Then
a Turkish reporter provoked everyone to admit that referring to Pontic Greek still has a
dangerous stance in Turkey thanks to existing conspiracy theories. Later, the musicians
admitted that this was likely a correct explanation.
Similarly, some Laz intellectuals once dared to warn some members of my
women band not to deal with the Pontic Greek songs but rather to concentrate on Laz
songs. Even though we did not experience any difficulty in performing in the Greek
321 Ayşenur Kolivar, “Kentli Bir Yerel Kimlik Temsili Olarak Karadeniz Rock, Müzikte Temsil ve Müziksel Temsil II Sempozyumu, 20 October 2010
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language, it was maybe because we, as women, were not perceived as dangerous
political actors. Nikos Mihailidis322, however tells about how he received threats and
condemning messages while being stigmatized as a Greek spy when he launched the
album ‘Horon ke Trağodia’ in 2001.323
Therefore, we can say that the Laz language and identity is not considered to be
dangerous when compared with Pontic Greek. Another signifying example of this
argument is that the inclusion of the band Zuğaşi Berepe and Kazım Koyuncu and
exclusion of all other rock-pop bands of other local languages (for example Ciwan
Haco) in the discography book of Anatolian Rock Bands324 despite the writer’s obvious
nationalist stance. In short, the groups in this musical genre generally have a moderate
political standing that enable them to achieve popularity.
322 Nikos Mihailidis is a third generation Pontic Greek migrants whose family migrated from Black Sea to Greece compulsory in 1924, and came back to Turkey for MA education in Boğaziçi University. Beside his studies he involved in music as playing kemençe. He carries on PHD in USA, Philadelphia University in anthropology and studies studying about kemençe in Trabzon.
323 Interview with Nikos Mihailidis, June, 2009
324 Cumbur Canbazoğlu, Kentin Türküsü, Anadolu Pop-Rock, Pan Yayıncılık, 2009, Istanbul There was a quotation mark of Aşık Veysel at the beginning of the book called ‘We are Turks and We perform Türkü’.
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The Laz as Good Citizens of Multicultural Turkey
As “entertainment, the telling and passing on of stories, is thus one of the
primary ways in which cultures speak to their members and thereby maintain a sense of
coherence, indeed of history,” 325 these concerts are significant venues for the Laz youth
to feel and perform their Lazness as well as maintain contact with their cultural memory
and, inevitably, history. The performances in the city obviously provide a face-to-face
physical contact in the city, unlike the gatherings of members who are related to each
other with kinship or geography (akrabalar ve hemşehriler). Those performances bring
the Laz together from different social backgrounds who actually do not know each other
and consequently enable them to abstract Lazness in a particular way where the sense of
‘identity’ strengthens.
In a concert of Empula -a Laz band performing Black Sea Rock music- I asked a
Laz girl from Ardeşen, in her early twenties from the audience, whether those
performances influenced the Laz. She said:
I don’t think the Black Sea people intend to convey their cultures. They just want to have fun. The music of İsmail Türüt, etc. suits my parents’ taste. We can see absurd lyrics, absurd singers on Black Sea channels, they don’t suit us, the youth. Our culture is this (pointing at the band on the stage).326
325 Eric Barnouw and Catherine E. Kirkland, “Entertainment” in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p.52
326 “Karadenizlilerin kendi kültürlerini yayma gibi bir durumları yok kesinlikle, onlar sadece eğlenmek istiyorlar. İsmail Türüt’lerin filan müziği annemlere babamlara göre, Karadeniz televizyonlarında saçma sapan sözlü şarkılar, şarkıcılar var, onlar biz gençlere hitap etmiyor. Bizim kültürümüz bu.” Empula Concert, Live Studio/ Beyoğlu, 18 February 2009
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The quotation above demonstrates how the performances construct the past and
the present by making divisions and setting up new relations. In this case, this musical
genre makes a differentiation between the first and the second generation Laz migrants’
perception of the Laz identity and musical taste. Secondly, as I proposed to emphasize
the undemanding character of these performances, the above quotation also exemplifies
such an attitude and perhaps indirectly refers to the ‘demanding’ Kurds.
The study of media messages and their effects has made clear that despite, and
perhaps because of, the innocuous associations of the label, entertainment plays a
significant role in the cultivation of values and beliefs and the socialization of values and
beliefs and socialization of children. Entertainment’s impact is embedded in premises
that are not debated and may not even be clearly articulated but are accepted by
audiences in order for the experience to have meaning. Its influence is pervasive and
cumulative. 327 Any weightier role of communication, such as education or persuasion,
are assumed to take a back seat, in contrast to other types of content such as news,
political communication, or advertising. Entertainments may indeed inform or persuade,
but it is generally presumed that these effects are secondary or incidental and will not
interfere with the real function of pleasant diversion. This assumption is embedded in
such phrases as ‘mere entertainment’ and ‘pure entertainment’ and the idea of
entertainment as an escape from reality. 328
Thus, the notion of ‘entertainment’ provides a public sphere in which Lazness
becomes ‘apolitical’ and consequently ‘safe’. These performances enable the Laz youth
327 Eric Barnouw and Catherine E. Kirkland, “Entertainment” in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, Ed. Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992, p.51
328 ibid, p.51
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to identify with their ‘origin’ without concern of stigmatization. This is different from
their parents. These performances may provide good opportunities for the Laz, though,
to produce the means for revitalizing their language. But this music does not seem to
have a deliberate concern with the identity politics yet.
The following example demonstrates how the Laz language and Laz identity is
relieved from its political attachments when it was performed through music and still
perceived as dangerous when it is ‘spoken’. This is probably because when the language
is revealed as a song, particularly when the lyrics are pastoral, it is considered a museum
artifact, as dead. However when someone is speaking it means it is still a living creature
thus dangerous in terms of politics.
A family friend from Rize who runs a kiosk in Beyoğlu, having close relations
with people from upper positions in the state and army expresses proudly being a
Turkish nationalist of Black Sea origin while expressing hostility about Kurds at every
opportunity. I once went into his kiosk and saw him watching Birol Topaloğlu in a
concert in a local Black Sea channel. He started grumbling once Topaloğlu started
speaking Laz after singing a Laz song. He said “We always loose because of this (act)”.
I said, “Should we deny the existence of the language or what?“ He said “No, I like it
too, even if I don’t understand it, I still listen to it, but I am against of this kind of
advertisement”. I asked “What would you do, as the Laz language is disappearing?” He
then responded, “Don’t worry it will survive, people are speaking it, but I don’t want
them to advertise it; not to be separatists like the Kurds”.
We can say that the ‘identity’ issue cannot be articulated without referring to the
Kurdish Political Movement in Turkey. As Stokes suggests, “social performance…is
seen as a practice in which meanings are generated, manipulated, even ironised, within
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certain limitations. Music and dance… do not simply ‘reflect’. Rather they provide the
means by which the hierarchies of place are negotiated and transformed.”329 Through my
investigations, I found that these performances construct the Laz identity by affiliating
with the Kurdish identity like a specter in direct or indirect ways.
When I ask Aytekin Çağ, the soloist of Empula, what he thought about the
“anxiety emerged in the public whether the cultural demands of Laz would evolve to the
political demands like the Kurds” he said he would rather approach the issues “without
making a differentiation between the Laz and the Kurd” but at the same time
differentiating them like “the Laz have always embraced their country and nation, I
demand the freedom for the Laz that was already provided for the Kurdish TV, radio and
music.”330 He then sent me an introduction text of their group including the following
words:
A baby is not given milk, unless s/he cries. We (the Laz) never cried, always smiled to the world. Maybe we were wrong because we were forgotten usually. Do we object to all these? No, on the contrary, we are here to do what our ancestors did in the past: in order to make the globe to feel how we enjoy life we play our tulum, kemençe, accordion, and guitar. Come, and share our joy, like we promised everyday in the primary school: Our reason of existence is to present our lives as a gift to the others.331
329 Martin Stokes, Introduction, in Ethnicity Identity and Music: the Musical Construction of Place, Oxford, Berg, 1994, p. 4
330 “Bir defa ben Kürt ve Laz ayrımı yapmadan olaylara bakmaya çalışıyorum, Lazlar bu ülke de her zaman vatanına milletine sahip çıkan bir kesimdir,Kürt TV ve radyolara vede şarkılarına tanınan özgürlüğün Lazlara da tanınmasını istiyorum.” Interview with Aytekin Çağ, February 2009
331 Ağlamayana meme vermezlermiş. Biz hiç ağlamadık. Hep güldük dünyaya karşı. Belki de suçumuz buydu da unutulduk çoğu zaman. Bunlara itiraz mı ediyoruz biz: Hayır. aksine; aynen atalarımızın yaptığını yapmak için karşınızdayız: içimizdeki hayat sevincini tüm dünyaya hissettirebilmek uğruna almışız elimize tulumumuzu, kemençemizi, akordeonumuzu, gitarımızı… Haydi siz de gelin ve bu hayat
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The above quotation once more expresses how ‘Lazness’ is only legitimized in
the realm of ‘entertainment’ business. That obviously means sticking to the Laz
stereotype as an ‘entertaining’ object through the Laz Jokes. While the Laz were
entertaining the ‘nation’ with the jokes before, now they do so with ‘music and dance’,
we can say. Anthias also says that this kind of stereotyping fixes cultures in stone and
can lead us to over-celebrate cultures as though they exist in little boxes and are to be
cherished and fostered, whatever their contents and whatever the social
practices/outcomes are ‘claimed’ for them. She argues that liberal multiculturalism often
falls into trap and she says that this perspective can also lead us “to condemning
cultures, particularly the cultures of those we see as the ‘other’ as ‘different’, as not like
ours, those of the foreigners, the ‘traditional’ groups as we might stereotype them. 332
In one of the concerts I attended, I asked a businessman from Gaziantep in his
late thirties who was invited by one of his colleagues from Trabzon what he thought
about the concert, he said: “I liked the environment actually very much. It is one of the
scarce places in which the Kurds do not exist.” Without realizing what he meant, I asked
whether he is a Kurd or not. He said: “No, I am not. I don’t actually have any hostility
towards them. But it seems to me that in Easterners’ environment, women and men
cannot enjoy things together like here.” That means to say, not only the performers but
also the audience may associate the performances with a hierarchical ‘difference’ with
Kurdish identity.
sevincini bizimle hissedin. Aynen ilkokulda hepimizin her sabah içtiği anttaki gibi: varlığımızın tek nedeni tüm insanların varlığına varlığımızı hediye etmektir.” Interview with Aytekin Çağ, February 2009
332 Anthias, 2002, p. 276
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Performance is said to be a mode of cultural action which is not a “simple
reflection of some essentialized, fixed attributes of a static, monolithic culture but an
arena for the contestant process of renegotiating experiences and meanings that
constitute culture”.333 Therefore, it would not be an exaggeration to say that those
performances dispersed the pejorative connotations of the Laz identity as well as the
language, music and dance, etc. In this way, some of the goals of the Laz intellectuals
were realized by the musical performances. However, another stereotype was on the
stage: mystic,334 revolutionary, ecologist, dynamic, tempered, cheerful, and confident.
Equipped with such characteristics, Laz identity has turned to a desired one that many
people would like to identify with. Music provides “means of imagining a more
fractured way of positioning one self in time and space, a technique more characteristic
of those diasporic, displaced populations whose experience of modernity is one of
transience, hybridity, and placelessness.” 335 Obviously, this musical genre eventually
enabled the second generation of migrants to position themselves in time and space in
contrast with the ‘placeless’ first generation.
As in the recent past, Lazness is still frequently attached to the geography of
Black Sea in a mysterious way. This mystification was actualized either by the outsiders
333 Marvin Carlson, Performance: A Critical Introduction, Routledge, 1996, p. 179
334 I think this mysticism is strongly related with the perception of the Black Sea region as “egzotic nature” with all the “untouched” jungles and mountains. The region is identified with the “nature” insomuch that it is treated as if Black Sea possesses the last remains of the nature. This perception of ‘nature’ is highly popular nowadays endorsed by the tourism sector and recent movies shot in Black Sea with fascinating landscapes. On the other hand, the nature is “touched” by hydroelectric power plants and massive motorways in the region putting on the agenda of ecologists primarily.
335Martin Stokes, “Istanbul Between Global and Local’ in Sounding Out”, The Culture Industries and Globalization of Istanbul, Ed. Çağlar Keyder, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc, 1999, p. 121
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or by insiders themselves. In the end, it appears that the Laz/Black Sea stereotype has
been taken for granted as a characteristic of personality identified with the nature of the
Black Sea region.
Why are we so passionate about freedom, did we inherit the excitement in our breasts from the striking flow of the river in the Kaçkar mountains?’(…) Lets drive our hearts towards the harsh waves of the sea….336
This mystification is usually instrumentalized in a positive way, in order to
distinguish Lazness by flattering their courage, diligence, etc.
I was just about to go on stage for a concert, they announced me in a way that totally puzzled me. Was it me whom they were announcing? I said to myself. ‘He is the rebellious guy from the savage Black Sea forest…”’ 337
I have also experienced similar announcements before our concerts with Dalepe
Nena particularly referring to the ‘savageness’ of Black Sea and its people.338 Somehow,
the survival skills of the Laz are flattered as if surviving in other parts of Anatolia were
easier. 339 I would like to attract the attention to the fact that, once the so-called ‘Black
Sea people’s positively-charged ‘violent nature’ is taken for granted; the next step, it is
to legitimize the ‘violence’ that is attached with it. And when this naturalization process
conjoins with the reactionist ‘nationalism’ the horrible incidents are inevitable as it was
336 “Özgürlük düşüne neden sevdalandı yüreğimiz böylesine? Kaçkar dağlarında gürül gürül kayalara vuran çağlayanlardan mı aldık göğüs kafeslerimizdeki bastırılmaz heyecanı? (…) Yüreklerimizi özgürlük denizinin sert dalgalarına sürelim.” Zuğaşi Berepe, Va Mişkunan album cover, 1995, Anadolu Müzik
337 “Bir gün bir konserde tam sahneye çıkacağım, beni anons ediyorlar içerde neye uğradığımı şaşırdım. ‘Vahşi Karadeniz dağlarının asi çocuğu.’ Dedim, benden mi bahsediyorlar ya kendi kendime!” The interview with the Laz musician Birol Topaloğlu, 28.4.2010, Balat
338 ‘Karadeniz’in hırçın dalgası gibi...’
339 Similarly, Volkan Konak was announced as “the arisen voice from the highlands of The Black Sea” when he was the guest of Beyaz Show, Kanal D, 21 March 2009
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the case of the murders of Hrant Dink and Priest Santoro in 2007. Even such horrible
incidents as these did not cause a decrease in the popularity of the Black Sea identity, as
it is once again obvious that those two representations (nationalist and Black Sea/Laz)
are still rather compatible nowadays.
As an outcome of the mystified, positively charged Black Sea representation,
particularly in the last five years, as soon as I mention my Laz origin, I frequently
receive the comment of “how nice, I like people from the Black Sea a lot!” especially
within the Turkish community. Furthermore, I can observe a considerable ‘tolerance’ of
the public towards the cultural performances of the Laz or Black Sea origin in the public
sphere.340 Even though I came across with a few prejudices assuming that I might be a
Turkish nationalist, my Lazness has been mostly welcomed by the Kurds I have met as
soon as I articulated myself.341
I could observe this change in a very short period of time also within my own
family. Even though my nineteen year old brother had no concern with the Laz culture
five years ago, nowadays he listens to Laz music, learned to dance horon, even
memorized a few Laz sentences because of his friends’ increasing interest in Laz
culture. One of his friends, originating from Trabzon but born in Istanbul, was even keen
on learning the Laz language. Apparently, being from Black Sea is not exotic enough
nowadays, so people are turning to Lazness.
340 To elaborate the term ‘tolerance’, let me speculate. I am suspicious if a group of Kurdish youth would be tolerated that much if they would dance halay by the Kadıköy ferry every Sunday for hours.
341 When we worked with some Kurdish associations for the festival organization, I felt as if this collaboration whitened their ‘blackness’ and meanwhile darkened my ‘whiteness’. I use those colors as a metaphor of the position of marginality in the society.
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Even though Lazness is growing in prominence, the Black Sea identity was
reified as an outcome. So, we come back to the starting point of the Laz stereotype,
where Blackens camouflages the cultural differences of the Black Sea region. Despite
the fact that Laz identity did not detach itself from Turkish identity yet as a matter of
being majority or minority, we can say that the Black Sea identity has been
deconstructed in some ways. People have come to understand that the Laz language is
not a ‘distorted’ Turkish accent and similarly the multicultural structure of Eastern Black
Sea region has been increasingly unveiled while the name Laz was camouflaging the
Georgians, Hemşins and Pontic Greeks as well as the Laz themselves in the past. Even
though it sounds good at the first glance, this removal causes many identity conflicts like
the discussions about the ‘true’ ethnic origins particularly in the region and the diaspora
as well.
When Lazness was deconstructed, the ethnic groups of conversion who were
living comfortably under the umbrella of ‘Laz’ began to live significant identity
problems about origin, etc. I propose my argument particularly through my experience
of the festival organization in Hemşin region in 2008. When we decided to set up the
festival site in Hemşin region, in order to disperse the ‘Laz nationalism’ stigma, we
faced with unbelievable conspiracy theories claiming that we had intentions to revitalize
the Armenian cultural roots in the region due to our connections with a U.S.A.
originated sponsor. The gossip became tragicomic, claiming that we were organizing
baptism rituals in the river after the conservative, nationalist newspaper Yeniçağ’s
headline: “Festival Kisvesi Altında Ermenicilik” 342
342 “Armenian Propaganda Under the Camouflage of Festival” Yeniçağ, 24 July 2008
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Nikos Mihailidis thinks in the same way. He has been researching the kemençe
in Trabzon for his postgraduate thesis. He says when it was revealed that they (dwellers
of Trabzon) were not ‘Laz’ any longer, they had to face with the question of ‘who am I?’
He furthers his observation as “it is now impossible to deny the cultural origins with the
Greeks owing to the Internet and the travels to Greece. You must see the web sites
having tough discussions about the kemençe shows in Youtube from both sides.”343
“This is not a Rebel Song”
While exploring a musical genre, I believe one should investigate the unpopular,
infamous aspects besides the mainstream aspects where I call this sphere simply as
‘periphery’. To put it in other words, I would like to expose the facts and the actors who
swim against the tide of the Black Sea Rock Music.
For example, even though the musician Erdal Bayrakoğlu can be considered
within this genre with the repertoire and musical structure, he believes he does not fit in
the norms of the genre. In his own words:
The profile of my audience is by majority the Kurds and Alevis not the Laz though.(…) Even though I didn’t receive any critique (from the Laz), but a lot of speculation(…)People like me actually, they find me sincere except the Laz. It is so sad but I cannot go to Lazona to give concerts but only a few times. I guess it is because I go to the ‘East’ quite often, in addition to that I don’t act like ‘an artist’. (…)Maybe because they find me too ‘political’.(…) I am frequently invited by student organizations, unions. I am able to contact with the leftist media however neither the Black Sea media nor the national (mainstream). As Kazım Koyuncu was political too, he
343 Interview with Nikos Mihailidis, June, 2009
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experienced the same reactions until the Gülbeyaz soap opera. People don’t posit you as an artist unless you become famous. They don’t desire to see someone they can reach rather someone they cannot reach.344
At this point, I would like to emphasize the effect of ‘circularity’ once more. The
more a cultural material or a performer circulates, the more aura it gains. Also, we can
see one more time, the marginal stance taken when Lazness is attached to Kurdish
identity. Additionally, as the Laz have a general tendency of staying away from
‘marginality’ at the expense of stabilizing the middle class, dominant position they
appreciate almost no one unless he/she becomes unmarked and popular.
I will consider some musicians at the periphery of this musical genre. The ones I
define as the ‘others’ in this musical production are Birol Topaloğlu, Vova and Dalepe
Nena, Helesa and Ayşenur Kolivar. They are not in entirely this musical genre, not
because the lack of hard rock sound in their music but because the way they construct
the cultural identity outside of the dominant discourse. However, the details placing
them in marginal positions vary.
For example, apart from Vova, all of these musicians include Pontic Greek songs
in their repertoires. As I mentioned earlier, the Pontic Greek identity still risks calling
forth the conventional conspiracy theories that emerged from the nationalist discourse.
344 “Dinleyicilerim arasında çoğunluğu Kürtler ve Aleviler oluşturuyor.(…) Hiç eleştiri gelmedi (Lazlardan) sadece karalama kampanyaları yapıldı. (…) İnsanlar beni seviyorlar, onlara sıcak, samimi geliyorum. Lazlar haricinde. Çok acı bir şey ama ben Lazona’da konsere gidemiyorum bir kaç sefer dışında. Sanırım doğuya çok sık gittiğim için. Beni biraz daha siyasi görüyorlar. Bir de pek sanatçı gibi davranmıyorum. (…)Öğrenci grupları sık sık çağırırlar beni, sendikalar. Sol kanallara kolayca çıkıyorum ama Karadeniz kanallarına, ulusal kanallara pek çıkamıyorum. Kazım Koyuncu da Gülbeyaz dizisine kadar tepki aldı. İnsanlar populer olana kadar sanatçı olarak kabul etmiyorlar seni. Ulaşabildikleri birini değil ulaşamadıkları kişiyi istiyorlar.” Interview with Erdal Bayrakoğlu, from the archive of Ayşenur Kolivar, 19 May 2009, İstanbul
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On the other hand, Vova performs only in the Hemşin language, an Armenian dialect,
which is enough to be marginalized in Turkey’s context.
Secondly, they do not attach Turkishness beside the Laz/Hemşin/Black Sea
identity but rather construct it as a subaltern group, suffered from the assimilation
policies of the state similar to the Kurds, Armenians, Greeks, Jews etc. Birol Topaloğlu
tells how it is difficult to convince the destan singers from Laz region to perform in
Diyarbakır with the Dengbejs (Kurdish epic singers) on the same stage. Being on the
same stage with dengbejs was a highly marginal act for them as because it means
treating Lazness as equal to Kurdishness.
Performing in Newroz Celebrations,345 singing a Kurdish song with
kemençe can also be considered in a similar way. Performing for the Kurds can be a
reason for marginalization on its own. In my band, a few members decided to leave the
group when we were invited to perform, and the majority of the group decided to
participate, in a festival in Mardin in 2005.
An event organizer who is known for organizing the Black Sea events like
festivals, concerts etc. was once confident about his advice for Birol Topaloğlu in his
absence, saying “I cannot possibly understand how such a good musician can be
involved in such good things and still not be popular! He has a very ‘marginal’
impression but we can actually blow up his popularity by, for example, making an
interview for a magazine with a Turkish flag behind.”
Furthermore, I can tell that those musicians do not hesitate to express their
objection to nationalist acts at the expense of being marginalized. It is interesting to see
345 In Kazlıçeşme, Istanbul, in March 2010.
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all those names condemning İsmail Türüt’s racist song for Hrant Dink’s case.346 Let me
give another example, when Ayşenur Kolivar expressed her opinions about the
assimilation policies of the nation state in a panel in METU, she received rather
aggressive reactions.347 In another case, she was subject to conspiracy theories when she
was researching about dialects and languages in Black Sea.
Thirdly, they resist the music industry in some ways. For example, Birol
Topaloğlu launches compilation albums (as well as his more popular solo albums)
without making complicated arrangements. Dalepe Nena performs destans, and a
capella (without instrument only human voice) songs, while Vova resists performing in
faster bits.
Moreover, resisting the male dominance in the cultural production can also be
another marginalization fact as Dalepe Nena, Ayşenur Kolivar and other woman
musicians suffered in this business. The environment rarely encourages women to
perform on instruments. Instead, they were positioned as vocals typically. As in my
band, most of our members play as well as sing, we frequently come across tolerance
regarding our musical deficiency assuming that it is natural for women. Similarly, when
we do sound-checks we always receive little attention by the technical personnel
compared with other male musicians. Moreover, we observe a kind of interference from
male musicians as well as the audience.
346 Hikmet Akçiçek, Birol Topaloğlu, Ayşenur Kolivar, Nilüfer Taşkın, “Yasini Tersinden Okumak” in Birikim Dergisi, 21 June 2007
347 A seminar on ‘Black Sea Music’ organized by the Turkish Folklore Studies (THBT) in METU, Ankara, 8 December 2006
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All these points should not be interpreted as if the above musicians are purely
marginal though. On the contrary, their music and actions might be pretty much
appropriate with the popular genre as they take place in popular projects and media from
time to time. For example, Birol Topaloğlu just launched a new album from all Black
Sea languages in an ‘entertaining’ musical form.348 Ayşenur Kolivar took stage in the
project of Demir Demirkan called ‘Biriz’349 as an example of mosaics multicultural
discourse. Dalepe Nena, on the other hand, always includes a few horon songs in their
repertoire according to the audience’s expectations.
In traditional sociological wisdom, the prognosis regarding popular music's
ability to tackle political issues is poor already. For Adorno in particular, and the
Frankfurt School in general, “‘popular music’ like the rest of the `cultural industry'
suppresses and smothers political thought and cannot be progressive.”350 Their
contemporary Walter Benjamin argued a more positive case, “seeing in the new
technologies of mass production and mass dissemination creative possibilities for artists
and cultural workers”.351 The term ‘popular music’ is used here to connote “genres
348 Kıyı Boyu Karadeniz, Colchis Music, 2011
349 Biriz, EU funded project, 6 November, 2010, Lütfü Kırdar Congressional Hall.
350 T. Adorno, `On Popular Music', Studies in Philosophy and Social Science, Institute of Social Research, New York, 1941; S. Frith and A. Goodwin (eds), On Record: Rock, Pop and the Written Word, London, Routledge, 1990, p. 301-14 cited in Bill Rolston, “This is not a Rebel Song”: The Irish Conflict and Popular Music, Race Class 2001, p. 50
351 Walter Benjamin, Illuminationen, Frankfurt, 1961/R; Eng. trans., 1968/R, ed. H. Arendt, cited in ‘Sociology of Music’ www.oxfordmusiconline.com.divit.library.itu.edu.tr:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/26085
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whose styles have evolved in an inextricable relationship with their dissemination via
the mass media and their marketing and sale on a mass-commodity basis”.352
Taking Kazım Koyuncu as their model, all of these bands associate their music
with ‘rock’ and claim the popular philosophy of rock music. In ‘the Sociology of Rock’,
Frith argues that “while ‘pop’ music, chart orientated and acquiescing in the conditions
of its own commercial production, was relevant to youth culture and subcultures in the
formation of their identities, it was rock music, judged as authentic and as carrying a
critique of its own conditions of production, that more directly served the oppositional
stances of many youth subcultures.”353 In a similar vein, Bill Rolston says, “rock is said
to be rooted in rebellion and freedom. It is imbued with the myth of authenticity; the
singer means what s/he says and will never sell out to the culture industry. Rock is music
with something to say. Pop, on the other hand, supposedly centers solely around
pleasure, in particular the pleasure of romantic (usually heterosexual) love. Pop is
inevitably commercial, its lyrics containing no deep message.”354 Even though ‘rock’
music has the same connotations in Turkey, the ‘oppositional stances’ of the rock music
performers are rather contestable considering the fact that many of them have a popular,
moderate, and even nationalist discourse.
352 ‘Popular World Music’ http://0-www.oxfordmusiconline.com.divit.library.itu.edu.tr:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/43179pg2
353 S. Frith, Sound Effects: Youth, Leisure and the Politics of Rock ’n’ Roll, New York : Constable, 1983, cited in ‘Sociology of Music’ www.oxfordmusiconline.com.divit.library.itu.edu.tr:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/26085
354 Bill Rolston, “This is not a Rebel Song”: The Irish Conflict and Popular Music, Race Class, 2001, p. 54-55
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In terms of articulating and celebrating political aspirations and causes, I find
Zuğaşi Berepe quite authentic compared with ‘softer’ discourses that emerged with
Kazım Koyuncu’s solo albums and the following Laz rock bands. The antagonistic
position of Zuğaşi Berepe mainly derived from their Laz lyrics apart from a few Turkish
and a Hemşin, emphasizing the assimilation of the language355, the future of the Laz
culture, the injustice life conditions of the Laz women356, the oppression and
revolution357. Even though the messages that came out of from the lyrics were more
individualistic in the second album, the hard rock sound was more in prominence.
Consequently they were popular only within a limited environment: politically opponent
university youth.
On the other hand, first of all, Kazım Koyuncu’s solo albums and the other
bands’ music is addressing to a wider audience with the ‘ethnic’ ingredients. The theme
355 We don’t know/ What to say now/ We don’t know how the future will be for us/ What we will say to the future/ We know we will sing on the way/ The brides will give birth to our kids/ Our kids will sing songs/ Our language will not die, will not die/ We don’t know what to say to the future/ We don’t know/ We are afraid/ Our old women die/ And kukumboli do not exist anymore/ We don’t know/ ‘Vamişkunan’ (We don’t know), Vamişkunan ,1993, Anadolu Müzik
356 “Now it is time for the tea collecting my aunty/ You will suffer from backache again/You will wait for the tea money/ Your husband is an idle who is wandering around/All work is waiting for you/ household, the barndhold, the kids/You work without break my aunty/Get into the factories aunty/ Make your husband help you/ The raise on the expenditures devastates you/ Your money becomes a leaf/ You never smile from heart as you never did/ One day you will relieve from all these/ We will do it together my aunty/ A world like a sun/ All the days pass with trouble/ Your children grow up/ Your mum spoke Laz to you/ You do it with your kids too/ Our language is dying my aunty/ You teach it to your kids/ Language is a mother/ When the language dies the mother dies/ Give a hand let’s cherish our language/ Don’t leave it to die my aunty “ ‘Dadişkimi’ (My Aunty) Zuğaşi Berepe, İgzas, 1998, Ada Müzik
357 They step on our bodies with their foots every day/ They cut off our ways/ They cut off our breaths/ I can see the world dies every morning/ Can we not do anything/ Will it be like that all the time/ Stand up/ Knock down/ Come together for demolition/We will have power to crash all these down/ You will be brave/ You live as you want/ You will think sometimes what life is/ You will be indifferent sometimes/ You will live for freedom and love ‘Oxoskva Do Oropa Şeni’,(For Freedom and Love) 1993, Anadolu Müzik
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‘tradition’ somehow disabled any affinity with the politics as almost all the songs were
about ‘love’ or ‘nature’.358 Secondly, instead of tackling with the identity politics, the
latter rather embraced the mission of ‘environmentalism’. As the ‘nature’ has been
associated with ‘Black Sea’ in a fetishistic way as if ‘nature’ exist only in ‘Black Sea’ ,
the popular ‘rebellion’ badge of rock music was highly compatible with the Laz
stereotype and frequently manipulated by the young Laz musicians:
Black Sea people are passionate, rebellious, outspoken and the music they produce would inevitably have similar characteristics.359
The nature of Black Sea is obvious, it is harsh, the roads are steep, the sea is peevish, the mountains are very high and rough. The first impression (of this nature) is to ‘take the rock music and ornament it within this nature’. When we consider the Black Sea person, he/she is compatible with this music too. The important thing is to be able to tell something to the people more than the musical style.360
In the last couple of years, the Laz and Black Sea people are playing leading
roles in the environmentalist movements in Turkey. Thus, the ‘ecology’ concept enabled
the Laz to cooperate with other ecologist movements as it is very likely to see a Laz
358 Kazım Koyuncu once said that “the song ‘Domivamis’ (When it’s run out) is the only song that has a social context as far as I and my friends came across. It tells about the scarcity and its devastating states, thus this song is quite important for us. “Ve bu (Domivamis’) şarkı benim ve arkadaşlarımın rastlayabildiği tek toplumsal içerikli şarkı. İçinde yokluktan ve bu durumun yarattığı sıkıntıdan söz ediyor. Genelde Laz ezgilerinde aşk ve doğa yer alır. Bu yüzden bu şarkının anlamı çok önemli.” ‘Viya: Müsekkin Niyetine...’ Aslı Atasoy, Radikal Gazetesi - 28 Ağustos 2001
359 “Karadenizliler tutkulu, hırçın, söz dinlemez, asi, sözünü esirgemeyen bir yapıya sahiptir, bu yapıya sahip insanların ürettikleri müzik de aynı özellikleri taşıyacaktır.” Korhan Özyıldız, the vocal of Marsis, “Adı Yok Kendisi Var, Rock, Folk, Etnik”, Evrim Kepenek, Birgün, 31 August 2008
360 “Karadeniz’in doğası bellidir. Sert bir doğası var, örneğin yolları sarp, denizi çok asi ve hırçın, dağları çok yüksek ve engebelidir. İşte insanın aklına direk gelen düşünce ‘rock müziği al ve bu tabiatın içinde motifle’. Karadeniz insanını da düşünürsek o da bu müzikle uyumlu. Zaten önemli olan yaptığın müziğin tarzından çok, insanlara bir şeyleri anlatabilmek.” Volkan Cebeci, the Vocal of Nena, “Adı Yok Kendisi Var, Rock, Folk, Etnik”, Evrim Kepenek, Birgün, 31 August 2008
146
band as well as the participants in the demonstration events. However, I witnessed the
controversy on the notions of culture and ecology in some of those ecological
movements.361 For example, on the eve of a demonstration towards the hydroelectric
power plants (HES) planning to be constructed in Black Sea, when some people offered
to carry banners written in Black Sea languages, the offer met with a repulse claiming
that “those banners might horrify some (nationalist) people as the ecology is more
important than culture”.
The affinity with ecology at this context recalls Žižek’s argument as interpreting
the ecology ‘as a new opium for the masses’:
When politics is reduced to the "private" domain, it takes the form of the politics of FEAR - fear of losing one's particular identity, of being overwhelmed. (…)That is to say, with the depoliticized, socially objective, expert administration and coordination of interests as the zero-level of politics, the only way to introduce passion into this field, to actively mobilize people, is through fear, a basic constituent of today's subjectivity. (…)This ecology of fear has all the chances of developing into the predominant form of ideology of global capitalism, a new opium for the masses replacing the declining religion: it takes over the old religion's fundamental function, that of putting on an unquestionable authority which can impose limits.(…) It is this distrust which makes ecology the ideal candidate for hegemonic ideology, since it echoes the anti-totalitarian post-political distrust of large collective acts. (…)And this brings us back to the notion of ecology as the new opium for the masses; the underlying message is again a deeply conservative one - any change can only be the change for the worst.362
Žižek’s arguments enabled me to interpret why those musicians and their fans
are that involved in the ecology issue. This involvement is obviously related to the
361 Karadeniz İsyandadır Hareketi
362 Slavoj Žižek, “Censorship Today: Violence, or Ecology as a New Opium for the Masses”, Lecture
in the Tilton Gallery (NYC), November 2007
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identity politics, as the former provides a secure sphere in which to be antagonistic while
such a discourse “in our exploitation of natural resources, we are borrowing from the
future, so one should treat our Earth with respect, as something ultimately Sacred,
something that should not be unveiled totally, that should and will forever remain a
Mystery, a power we should trust, not dominate” is almost ‘universally’ taken for
granted. To put it other in other words, it is easier to believe the future will be worse
than now thanks to environmental exploitation than to believe that there is something to
be done to make the world fair than now. Thus, considering the fact that identity politics
is still forming a hot debate in Turkey, ecological opposition is easier to adapt. However,
I do not want to underestimate the ecological opposition as it may evolve into a highly
radical standing of opposition in the future.
Even though the ‘denial’ of the different ethnic groups apart from Turks has lost
its legitimacy, despite a few singular inefficient attempts, there is no legal background to
secure the means of productions for ethnic groups yet. I don’t think that it is necessary
the state to provide those means (like TV channel run by the state- TRT Şeş) but at least
it has to change its constitution to provide all the citizens feel free to express themselves
without getting marked and equal with each other.
In short, I would like to emphasize how a musical genre is associated with
politics when it is attached with the concept of ‘identity’. As every musical genre
constructs a new world and is comprised of a particular historical and geographical
experience,363 from repertoire to its instruments, the narrative discourses to the events
363 Martin Stokes, ‘Istanbul Between Global and Local’ in Sounding Out, The Culture Industries and Globalization of İstanbul, Ed. Çağlar Keyder, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc, 1999
148
involved, all those facts are part of this experience which helps in the investigation of
the political boundaries. When I evaluated those performances in this totality, despite the
innovative and authentic aspects, I do not agree with those who believe that they are
‘rebellious.’364
364 Bill Rolston who inspired me to decide the name of my thesis at the very last moment, is also portraying a similar context about the music bands who are either reluctant or getting marginal to “touch the issue of the `troubles' in the North of Ireland”. He says “along with the superficial treatment of the subject in a number of songs, would seem to confirm the impression that popular music is quite inept when it comes to such major political themes.” Bill Rolston, “This is not a Rebel Song”: The Irish Conflict and Popular Music, Race Class, 2001, p. 64
149
CHAPTER V: CONCLUSION
In this thesis, my purpose is to evaluate the cultural performances of the Laz that
have emerged in the urban public sphere in the 2000s. Simply, I interpret those
performances as a response to the repercussions of the cultural policies which were
realized through the ‘modernization project’ in Turkey. I also question these
performances whether they contribute to challenge identity politics in Turkey.
In the first chapter, I attempted to expose the economic and social conditions that
shaped the contemporary Laz identity. In this context, I discussed that tea farming and
cultural policies in line with the modernization project which positioned the Laz within
the hegemonic discourse as ‘loyal citizens’ to the state.
I suggest that transforming from lower class peasants to the middle class
positions by tea farming, the Laz were quite privileged which, then, engendered the
‘domestication of the state’ in the Laz region. On the other hand, the modernization
project was constructed on a dichotomy between the modern/urban and the
local/traditional. The superiority of the first implied the abandonment of the local /
traditional values as a condition of benefiting the boons of modern life. Thus, I evaluate
these two main facts discouraging the Laz articulating their cultural ‘difference’ in the
public sphere. On the contrary, they were rather inclined to emphasize the cultural
‘similarity’ as they voluntarily internalized the assimilation policies.365
365 Leyla Neyzi portrays a similar stance about the Alevis in Turkey “the generation of Alevis raised in the early Republican period tended to embrace an assimilationist stance as a way of ensuring upward mobility and cultural acceptance of community members in the public sphere.” Leyla Neyzi, “Embodied Elders: Space and Subjectivity in the Music of Metin-Kemal Kahraman”, Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 38, No. 1, 2002, p. 92
150
When we come to the 1990s, the nationalist cultural policies of the state have
been increasingly challenged concurrent with globalization, the Kurdish Political
Movement, etc. Like other ethnic groups in Turkey, some Laz intellectuals emerged to
criticize the assimilationist policies and demanded a new space for a new representation
of their cultural identity by replacing the popular stereotypes.
In the second chapter, I tried to evaluate those intellectuals’ productions as an
effort to construct a new Laz identity. While doing so, I found those three concepts
foundational: history, language and culture. The mutual discourse that came out from
those productions was to modernize the Laz culture through literacy while dispersing the
pejorative connotations of ‘Lazness’. On the other hand, as the Laz identity was strongly
attached with the ‘past’ and ‘village’ as an outcome of the cultural policies, those
intellectuals attempted to reconstruct it in line with ‘the modern and urban’ as they were
all urban dwellers.
However, the so-called Laz Cultural Movement has not turned into a mass
movement as their visions and expectations about Lazness have not met with ‘their’
‘people.’ Thus, they were rather marginalized while managing to circulate their
productions among the members of an educated minority. First of all, as a middle class
community the Laz people did not intend to be marginalized and stigmatized like Kurds,
Armenians and Greeks, etc. who claim that they were subject to bare oppression by the
state. Thus, they did not also want to be recognized as ‘oppressed’ even though they
suffered from ‘invisibility’ and misrepresentation in the public sphere.
One of the arguments that I developed through this thesis is that, the Laz identity
has been reconstituted in parallel with the ‘Kurdish identity’ in the last decade. As the
two communities share similar characteristics of Islam, bilingualism and agriculturalism,
151
and sedentary position in Anatolia, the Laz made the most of it to differentiate
themselves from the Kurds to preserve their privileged middle class position.
When we come to the 2000s, the Laz met with a new way of representation in the
public sphere: popular music. Despite the earlier presentations of Laz music by various
musicians, Lazness is particularly highlighted with music by the fame of Kazım
Koyuncu. In the third chapter, I tried to analyze the facts that have transformed Kazım
Koyuncu into a phenomenon. In this respect, I discussed that his music was considerably
influential for the masses as he was conjoining the concept of tradition and modernity at
the same time, since people suffered from this dichotomy consciously or unconsciously
so far. I argue that his Lazness was offering a ‘moderate’ and ‘marketable’ ethnic
identity which then turned into a genre called ‘Black Sea Rock’ after his death. While
the Laz identity was considered as an entity to be abandoned before, it has turned into a
‘desired’ one nowadays in the urban context, particularly for the second generation of
Laz migrants.
What I intended to display was that Lazness is only acceptable when it is
associated with popular culture, market, and entertainment business. I interpreted this
stance as a signifier of the hegemonic discourse that recognizes the ethnic groups as long
as they do not demand cultural rights (like education in mother language) or push for
facing the oppressive history, etc. but just performing songs ‘peacefully’. One of the
main purposes of this thesis is to criticize this hegemonic discourse which positions the
Laz and Kurds with Armenians, etc. in opposite poles. This opposition obviously marks
the Laz as the ‘acceptable’ citizens while marking the ‘others’ as ‘Others’. Thus, we can
say that there is a new scaling within the society endorsed by the hegemonic discourse.
And the Laz are positioning (themselves) as ‘entertainers of the nation’ through music
152
and dance similar to the earlier Laz jokes. The tolerance and consumption of those music
and dance performances in the public sphere demonstrates that this hegemonic
perception of the ethnic identities is shared not only by the state but also by the majority
of the people in urban settings.
As the performance theory has been a significant frame for my argumentations in
my study, I tried to present the potential of the performances to mark or change the
cultural identity. However, I interpret the expanding visibility of Lazness in the public
sphere not much efficacious for example on the flourishment of Laz language despite the
great interest on it. Simply speaking, Laz is not considered as a negative marker366
anymore as long as it is performed through a musical form, but still there is no sufficient
infrastructure for reproduction of the language itself.
Elaborating on the contemporary Laz identity from a larger perspective including
the economic background, intellectuals’ perspectives, and the performances were rather
challenging. However, the limited nature of the academic studies in this field has
probably disabled me to go through some of those subjects. Thus, those subjects deserve
to be endorsed by a deep ethnographic study in the future as this text is constituted
strongly around my own subjectivity.
Through this thesis, I hope to contribute to a critical reflection on the identity
politics in Turkey by demonstrating the modernization experiences of the Laz as a
minority group who positioned themselves within the hegemonic discourse in general.
366 “Laz language is much better than a decade ago. Because the youth do not ashame of Laz language as it was the case earlier.” “Lazca şimdi 10 sene öncesinden daha iyi durumda. Artık gençler Lazcadan utanmıyor çünkü; önceden böyle bir durum vardı.” Ercan Çelik “Koyuncu’dan Horona Davet”, Radikal, 4 April 2004
153
Even though I portrayed a pessimistic panorama, I still believe in the transformative
potential of those performances. Mehmedali Barış Beşli, once told how, as Zuğaşi
Berepe, they were afraid of being ‘shot’ on the way from their first concert in Pazar.367
They were not shot, but I believe that we will not be able to live peacefully in this
country unless Ciwan Haco368 performs in Lazona without the fear of getting ‘shot’.
367 Asi Yürek Kazım Koyuncu http://www.yuksekovahaber.com/haber/asi-yurek-kazim-koyuncu--32743.htm
368 Fameous Kurdish rock musician
154
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Smadar, Lavie and Swedenburg, Ted (edi.) Displacement, Diaspora, and Geographies of Identity, Duke University Press, 1996
Sokullu, S., Türk Tiyatrosunda Komedyanın Evrimi, Kültür Bakanlığı, Ankara, 1997
Somer, Murat, “Does It Take Democrats to Democratize? Lessons From Islamic and Secular Elite Values in Turkey”, Comparative Political Studies, V. 44: 511, 2011
Stam, Robert, “Multiculturalism and the Neoconservatives” in Dangerous Liaisons Gender and Postcolonial Perspectives, edited by Anne McClintock, Aamir Mufti, and Ella Shohat, Cultural Politics, University of Minnesota Press, 1997
Stokes, Martin, The Arabesk Debate: Music and Musicians in Modern Turkey, Oxford: Clarendon Press, New York; Oxford University Press, 1992
___. “Place, Exchange and Meaning: Black Sea Musicians in the West of Ireland”, Ethnicity, Identity, and Music: the Musical Construction of Place, edited by Martin Stokes, Imprint Oxford, UK; Providence, RI: Berg, 1997
___.‘Istanbul Between Global and Local” in Sounding Out, The Culture Industries and Globalization of Istanbul, Ed. Çağlar Keyder, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 1999
___. “Introduction”, Ethnicity, Identity and Music: The Musical Construction of Place. edited by Martin Stokes, Imprint Oxford, UK; Providence, RI: Berg, 1997
Taylor, Diana, “The Theatre of Operations: Performing Nation-ness in the Public Sphere” in Disapearing Acts: Spectacles of Gender and Nationalism in Argentina's “Dirty War.”, Duke University Press, 1997
Tezcür, Güneş Murat, “Kurdish Nationalism and Identity in Turkey: A Conceptual Reinterpretation”, European Journal of Turkish Studies, Vol. 10, 2009
Titon, Jeff Todd, “Music, Folk and Tradition” in Folklore, Cultural Performances, and Popular Entertainments, edited by Richard Bauman, Oxford University Press, 1992
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Trouillot, Michael-Rolph, “Preface”, Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History, Beacon Press, 1995
Tsing, Anna , “Inside the Economy of Appearances”, Public Culture - Volume 12, Number 1, Winter, 2000
Tunaya, Tank Zafer, “Laz Tekamül-ü Milli Cemiyeti” in Ogni, V.1, İstanbul, 1993
Yavuz, M. Hakan, “Five Stages of the Construction of Kurdish Nationalism in Turkey” in Nationalism & Ethnic Politics, Vol. 7, Autumn, 2001
Yelda, “Türk Solcularının Etnik Kimilik Sorunu Yoktur, Onlar Dünyalıdır” in Birikim Aylık Sosyalist Kültür Dergisi, ‘Etnik Kimlik ve Azınlıklar’ Özel Sayı, V. 71-72, March- April, 1995
Žižek, Slavoj, “Censorship Today: Violence, or Ecology as a New Opium for the Masses” Lecture in the Tilton Gallery (NYC) November, 2007
THESIS
Avcı, Ismail, Lazlarda Sosyokültürel Değişim, Unpublished MA Thesis, International Relations Department, IstanbulUniversity, 2002
Bilal, Melissa, The Lost Lullaby and Other Stories About Being an Armenian in Turkey, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, 2004
Dehmen, Bedirhan, Appropriations of Folk Dance at the Intersection of the National and the Global : Sultans of the Dance, Unpublished MA Thesis, Sociology Department, Bogazici University, 2003
Kolluoğlu, Mustafa Poyraz, Modernism in Ottoman Empire and Turkish Music and the Years of 1930s, 1940s, Unpublished MA Thesis, Marmara University, International Relations Department, Istanbul, 2010
Taşkın, Nilüfer, Laz Fıkraları ve Lazların Kentleşme Süreci, Undergraduate Thesis, Sociology Department, University of Mimar Sinan, Istanbul, 2003
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NEWSPAPERS
"Denizin Çocuğu Giderken Çernobil Sorumsuzluğuna İsyan Başlattı", Hatice Tuncer, Cumhuriyet Gazetesi, 03 July 2005
“Adı Yok Kendisi Var, Rock, Folk, Etnik”, Evrim Kepenek, Birgün, 31 August 2008
“Etnik Üstü Az Modern”, Evrensel Gazetesi - 31 August 2001
“Helsinki’ye Kardeş Türküler”, Miliyet Gazetesi 26 December 1999
“İnsan Yaşamak İstiyor”, Sabah Gazetesi - 04 May 2005
“Karadeniz’de Rock Çağı”, Taraf, 12 October 2006,
“Kazım Koyuncu'ya Üzülüyoruz”, Rock'n Roll Kültür Mecmuası - 27 May 2005
“Koyuncu’dan Horona Davet”, Ercan Çelik, Radikal Gazetesi, 04 April 2004
“Kürt Anasını Görmesin”, Yıldırım Türker, Radikal Gazetesi, 06 April 2003
“Şimdi de bu mu çıktı?”, Ali Sirmen, Milliyet, 11 October 1992
“Turkey's Quest to Modernise Remains on Track” Financial Times, Soli Özel, 25 July 2007
“Viya: Müsekkin Niyetine...”, Aslı Atasoy, Radikal Gazetesi, 28 August 2001
“Zuğaşi Berepe’ye Cevap”, Mücadele ve Sorumluluk, Kurtuluş, Kemal Sahir Gürel, 29 April 1995
Akşam Gazetesi - 03 February 2003
Cumhuriyet Gazetesi, Toktamış Ateş, Arayış, 27 November, 1993
Hurriyet Daily News, 5 February 2009.
Interview with Aytekin Çağ, February 2009
Interview with Kazım Koyuncu on Umut Radyo, in Pazar (Rize). 3 February 2004 (Date uncertain)
Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, “N3aşa Exti” Roll, V. 99, July, 2005
Interview with Vova, “Bu Dünya Soğuyacak”, Roll.(Date uncertain)
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Interview with Zuğaşi Berepe, “Görmeyelim, Duymayalım, Lazona’da Lazca Konuşulmadığını, Roll. (Date Uncertain)
Kaldıraç, Aylık Sosyalist Dergi, Kaldıraç Yayınevi, 2000
Trabzonspor Dergisi - 10 May 2004
WEBSITES
“Asi Yürek Kazım Koyuncu” http://www.yuksekovahaber.com/haber/asi-yurek-kazim-koyuncu--32743.htm
Aksamaz, Ali İhsan (Eds.) http://www.kolkhoba.org/makaletrk6.htm
Ebru Drew, Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, Vatan Gazetesi 18.04.2004
http://www.savaskarsitlari.org/arsiv.asp?ArsivTipID=5&ArsivAnaID=14024
http://www.studyoimge.com/makale/986/kazim-koyuncu-yla-soylesi
Interview with Kazım Koyuncu, 26 June 2005, www.polifoni.net
Özdemir, Latif (2000) 'Vatandaş Türkçe konuş' http://www.demanu.com.tr/rojateze/10.11.2000/kose_yazilari/Latifozdemir.html
Sapan, Özcan, “Lazcayı Yok Etmenin Dayanılmazlığı
http://www.lazuri.com/tkvani_ncarepe/t_u_lazcayi_yoketmenin_dayanilmazligi.html
Yıldız, Burcu ‘Türkiye’de Popüler Müzik ve Çokkültürlülük Üzerine Notlar…’ 3 January 2009 http://www.bgst.org/muzik/yazilar/popmuzik_cokkulturluluk.asp
‘Sociology of Music’ www.oxfordmusiconline.com.divit.library.itu.edu.tr:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/26085
‘Popular World Music’ www.oxfordmusiconline.com.divit.library.itu.edu.tr:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/43179pg2
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INTERVIEWS
Interview with Birol Topaloğlu, 16 September 2010 in Balat
Interview with Erdal Bayrakoğlu, from the archive of Ayşenur Kolivar, 19 May 2009, Istanbul
Interview with Eren Dağıstanlı, from the archive of BGST(Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu), 2009
Interview with Mine Kalaycı in May 2010
Interview with Nikos Mihailidis, June, 2009
The interview with İsmail Avcı, from the archive of BGST(Boğaziçi Gösteri Sanatları Topluluğu), 2009.
The interview with the Laz musician Birol Topaloğlu, 28 April 2010, Balat
ALBUMS & DOCUMENTARIES
Elif Ergezen, “Death of the Poet”, 2009 (Documentary film)
Funda Özyurt “4000 yıllık Tarih Lazlar”, 2008 (Documentary film)
Ümit Kıvanç “Şarkılarla Geçtim Aranızdan”, 2008 (Documentary film)
Birol Topaloğlu, Heyamo, Kalan Müzik, 1997
Kazım Koyuncu, Hayde, Metropol Müzik, 2004
Kazım Koyuncu, Şarkılarla Geçtim Aranızdan, January 2007
Kazım Koyuncu, Viya, Metropol Müzik, 2001
Kizirnos, Archive Colchis Music, 2010
Lazeburi Archive, Kalan Music, 2001
Salkım Söğüt I, Metropol Müzik, 1999
Salkım Söğüt II, Metropol Müzik, 2000
Zuğaşi Berepe, İgzas, Ada Müzik ,1998
Zuğaşi Berepe, Vamişkunan, Anadolu Müzik, 1993